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Chemical Alert!: A Community Action Handbook
 9780292767119

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CHEMICAL ALERTI A COMMUNITY ACTION HANDBOOK

CHEMICAL A COMMUNITY ACTION HANDBOOK Edited by Marvin S. Legator and Sabrina F. Strawn

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UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PRESS, AUSTIN

Copyright © 1993 by the University of Texas Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Revised and expanded edition, 1993 Requests for permission to reproduce material from this work should be sent to Permissions, University of Texas Press, Box 7819, Austin, Texas 78713-7819 .

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30 70 100

24.3 51.4 124.3

5.3 20.6 24.3

28.1 424.4 590.5

1.16 8.26 4.75

30 60 160

30.4 64.3 155.4

0.4 4.3 4.6

0.2 18.5 21.2

0.00 0.29 0.14

25 50 175

30.4 64.3 155.4

5.4 14.3 19.6

29.2 204.5 384.2

0.96 3.18 2.47 21.21

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expected.

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Lots of Information

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that, whatever the difference is between the three zones, it is significantly affecting the development of pulmonary problems within each zone. Comparing Your Population with Established Health Statistics

Occasionally, obtaining a comparison population is difficult, or suitable local health statistics exist that make a comparison population unnecessary. In these cases you will compare the results from your study with reported standards for the health outcomes you are interested in. Since these health statistics are presented as rates of various sorts, one of the easiest ways to deal with your data is to generate a "reasonable bound" on the health statistic rate for a given health problem. The limits for this "reasonable bound" are determined by the frequency distribution of the group under study. Back to an example mentioned earlier: If the health statistics for a given disease showed a rate of ten per thousand, then in any population of one thousand people it would not be unexpected to see from four to sixteen cases of that disease, owing to normal variation within populations. Conversely, if you find sixteen cases of this disease in a population of one thousand people, even though your rate is sixteen per thousand you cannot say with reasonable certainty that your population is any different from a "normal population" that has a rate of ten per thousand. If this is confusing, a short test period of flipping a coin in series of ten tries, as described in chapter S, should point out that, though the average number of heads you get when flipping the coin ten times is five, you actually see anywhere from two to eight heads in any given set of ten flips. In fact, in only about one-fourth of the sets of ten will you actually get five heads. The survey you have done is like a single series of ten flips. You may end up with exactly the published rate for some disease (just like getting five heads), you may get a number slightly different from the published rate (like seeing three or seven heads), or you may get a number that seems significantly different from the published rate (like getting all heads). Setting a "reasonable bound" on the estimate of the rate for a health outcome lets you put a range around the published statistic so you can see if the observed rate for your population is within this bound. If your observed rate falls outside this range, then you must suspect that your population is different from the population used to generate the published health statistics. The possible advantages and pitfalls of using published health statistics have been discussed in previous chapters, and you should refresh your understanding of these if necessary. Unlike the chi-square analysis on two different populations,

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Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

this technique, though it points out a potential problem, is weaker in its ability to suggest a possible cause. The mathematical process for generating this "reasonable bound" is based on two factors: the "normal" rate for the health problem and the number of people in your population who could potentially develop that problem. The normal rate (P), in decimal notation, is multiplied by one minus that rate (1 - P) and divided by the number of susceptible people in your population (N), then the square root of this number is taken:

~

'tj--z;J• This is considered the standard error of your estimate of a proportion (the rate of the disease). Most of the time (more than 90 percent) the estimate of the disease rate you get should fall within 1.65 times this standard error from the published rate: 1.65

X

J(P)

~-P).

For example, with a published rate of 0.06 (six per hundred) and a population size of 1,000: 1.65

X

J ~(P)

P) =

.0124.

Therefore, if the rate you observe is between 0.0476 and 0.0724, or 48 and 72 per thousand, then you cannot say that your population is different from the "normal" population used to generate the health statistics. If your observed rate falls outside this reasonable bound, then you must take note of the situation, and if it falls well outside this range you should be concerned. In this case our range was 60 ± (plus or minus) 12 cases per thousand. If your observed rate is outside this range by more than half again the bound (12), that is, 0.5 x 12 = 6, this is a very important observation that suggests your population is significantly different from the normal population. Since the calculations involved can be tedious and certain standard situations can be anticipated, table 8.11 has been generated to help you quickly estimate a reasonable bound for a few standard population sizes and rates. Remember that the population sizes down the left side represent the number of people you surveyed who could potentially develop a particular health problem, and the proportions across the top

Lots of Information

I 51

are the decimal representation of the normal rate as reported in published health statistics. The bounds used in this table are the same as those presented in the mathematical computation. Since you are generally interested in determining a directional difference, such as an increase in pulmonary disease or a decrease in number of births, the table gives a directional bound. Instead of using 1.65 times the standard error of the estimate (SEE), which gives a bidirectional measure and encompasses about 90 percent of the expected outcomes. If your actual population size or proportion for the health outcome does not appear in the table, you may do some sort of simple extrapolation by comparing your numbers with those that most closely bracket your data. Once again, these are ranges about a set proportion, and you still must solve the equation (background proportion + bound) or (background proportion- bound), where bound is equivalent to 1.28

X

J(P)

~- P),

which has been solved for you in this table. If your proportion (rate) falls near the edge of the reasonable bound, this constitutes a warning that the situation needs to be investigated further. If your proportion (rate) falls outside the bound by more than half again the size of the bound- that is, outside (background proportion ± 1.5 x bound)then significant evidence exists to warrant special attention as to why your population is so different from the "normal" population. But keep in mind at all times the limitations of using published health statistics and realize that this evidence alone is not sufficient to attribute blame concerning the cause of the health problem; rather, it simply shows that the health problem is "real." OTHER STATISTICAL CONSIDERATIONS

Although the mathematical portions of statistics are fairly straightforward, a few aspects pertaining to experimental design and data interpretation need to be discussed. One factor, alluded to in the chapter on experimental design (chapter 5), is the concept of "power." The other factor is the role of "false positive" results in the analysis of data. We will briefly explain these concepts here so that you can appreciate the limits they can put on your study. Power

With regard to a study and analysis, "power" means the ability to detect a difference between two populations given that the difference does ex-

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Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

Table 8.1 1. Natural Variation around Published Proportions with a Variety

of Population Sizes Expected Proportions From Published Health Statistics Population .00001 Size

so 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 600 700 800 900 1,000 1,200 1,400 1,600 1,800 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 4,000 4,500

.00057 .00040 .00030 .00029 .00026 .00023 .00022 .00020 .00019 .00018 .00017 .00015 .00014 .00013 .00013 .00012 .00011 .00010 .00010 .00009 .00008 .00007 .00007 .00006 .00006

.00002

.00004

.00008

.00016

.00032

.00064

.0013

.00081 .00057 .00047 .00040 .00036 .00033 .00031 .00029 .00027 .00026 .00023 .00022 .00020 .00019 .00018 .00017 .00015 .00014 .00013 .00013 .00011 .00010 .00010 .00009 .00009

.00114 .00081 .00066 .00057 .00051 .00047 .00043 .00040 .00038 .00036 .00033 .00031 .00029 .00027 .00026 .00023 .00022 .00020 .00019 .00018 .00016 .00015 .00014 .00013 .00012

.00162 .00114 .00093 .00081 .00072 .00066 .00061 .00057 .00054 .00051 .00047 .00043 .00040 .00038 .00036 .00033 .00031 .00029 .00027 .00026 .00023 .00021 .00019 .00018 .00017

.00229 .00162 .00132 .00114 .00102 .00093 .00087 .00081 .00076 .00072 .00066 .00061 .00057 .00054 .00051 .00047 .00043 .00040 .00038 .00036 .00032 .00030 .00027 .00026 .00024

.00324 .00229 .00187 .00162 .00145 .00132 .00122 .00114 .00108 .00102 .00093 .00087 .00081 .00076 .00072 .00066 .00061 .00057 .00054 .00051 .00046 .00042 .00039 .00036 .00034

.00548 .00324 .00264 .00229 .00205 .00187 .00173 .00162 .00153 .00145 .00132 .00122 .00114 .00108 .00102 .00093 .00087 .00081 .00076 .00072 .00065 .00059 .00055 .00051 .00048

.0065 .0046 .0037 .0032 .0029 .0026 .0024 .0023 .0022 .0020 .0019 .0017 .0016 .0015 .0014 .0013 .0012 .0011 .0011 .0010 .00091 .00094 .00077 .00072 .00068

ist. Although a number of things can contribute to a study's sensitivity (power), here we will deal only with three statistical factors: population, or more specifically sample size, natural variation, and the magnitude of the difference one is trying to detect. Since the equations needed to derive a measure of power are complicated, we will not get involved with them. Instead, table 8.12 presents a collection of possible study situations. With some orientation you should be able to use the table to help you design your study or to put your results in proper context. The table is structured around two numbers: the background rate (proportion) for a given health effect is listed down the left side, and the relative increase over the background rate is across the top. The fig-

Lots of Information

15!11

Table 8.11.

(continued) Expected Proportions From Published Health Statistics Population .0026 Size

.0051

.0102

.0205

.0410

.0819

.1638

.3277

.6554

50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 600 700 800 900 1,000 1,200 1,400 1,600 1,800 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 4,000 4,500

.0129 .0091 .0075 .0065 .0058 .0053 .0049 .0046 .0043 .0041 .0037 .0035 .0032 .0030 .0029 .0026 .0024 .0023 .0022 .0020 .0018 .0017 .0015 .0014 .0014

.0182 .0129 .0105 .0091 .0081 .0074 .0069 .0064 .0061 .0058 .0053 .0049 .0046 .0043 .0041 .0037 .0034 .0032 .0030 .0029 .0026 .0024 .0022 .0020 .0019

.0256 .0181 .0148 .0128 .0115

.0359 .0254 .0207 .0179 .0160 .0146 .0136 .0127 .0120 .0113 .0104 .0096 .0090 .0085 .0080 .0073 .0068 .0063 .0060 .0057 .0051 .0046 .0043 .0040 .0038

.0496 .0351 .0287 .0248 .0222 .0203 .0188 .0176 .0165 .0157 .0143 .0133 .0124 .0117 .0111 .0101 .0094 .0088 .0083 .0078 .0070 .0064 .0059 .0056 .0052

.0670 .0474 .0387 .0335 .0300 .0274 .0253 .0237 .0223 .0212 .0193 .0179 .0168 .0158 .0150 .0137 .0127 .0118 .0112 .0106 .0095 .0086 .0080 .0075 .0071

.0850 .0601 .0491 .0425 .0380 .0347 .0321 .0300 .0283 .0269 .0245 .0227 .0212 .0200 .0190 .0173 .0161 .0150 .0142 .0134 .0120 .0110 .0102 .0095 .0090

.0860 .0608 .0497 .0430 .0385 .0351 .0325 .0304 .0287 .0272 .0248 .0230 .0215 .0203 .0192 .0176 .0163 .0152 .0143 .0136 .0122 .0111 .0103 .0096 .0091

.0091 .0065 .0053 .0046 .0041 .0037 .0035 .0032 .0030 .0029 .0026 .0024 .0023 .0022 .0020 .0019 .0017 .0016 .0015 .0014 .0013 .0012 .0011 .0010 .00096

.QlOS

.0097 .0091 .0085 .0081 .0074 .0069 .0064 .0060 .0057 .0052 .0048 .0045 .0043 .0041 .0036 .0033 .0031 .0029 .0027

ures that constitute the body of the table are the number of people you would need to look at in both the exposed and the control populations in order to have an 80 percent chance of demonstrating that a difference does exist. For example, for a health problem with a background rate of 0.02 (twenty per thousand), if you wanted to be able to detect a twofold increase (doubling) in your population, you would have to look at 874 people in your population and 874 people from a control population. When we examine the table, two points become apparent. First, the larger the background rate for a given health problem, the smaller the study size needed to demonstrate a relative change in incidence. This

Table 8.12. Population Sizes for Exposed and Control Groups Needed to Have an 80 Percent Chance of Demonstrating a Significant Difference Between Two Populations Relative Increase Over Background Rate Background Rate .00001 .00002 .00004 .00008 .00016 .00032 .00064 .00128 .00256 .005 .01 .02 .04 .05 .10 .15 .20 .25 .30 .35 .40 .45 .50

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

1,900,000 930,000 460,000 230,000 120,000 57,862 28,915 14,442 7,206 3,587 1,778 874 422 340 155 93 62 44 31 23 16 11 7

345,000 170,000 85,755 42,872 21,430 10,709 5,349 2,669 1,328 659 324 156 73 57 23 12 6 3

170,000 86,444 43,217 21,604 10,798 5,394 2,693 1,342 667 329 160 76 34 26 9 3

110,000 56,703 28,347 14,170 7,081 3,536 1,764 878 435 214 103 48 20 15 4

83,853 41,923 20,958 10,475 5,234 2,613 1,303 648 320 157 75 34 13 10 1

66,338 33,165 16,579 8,286 4,139 2,066 1,029 511 252 123 58 25 9 6

54,802 27,398 13,695 6,844 3,418 1,706 850 421 207 100 47 20

46,650 23,322 11,657 5,825 2,909 1,451 722 358 176 85 39 16 5 3

7 4

Lots of Information

ISS

results from the magnitude of the difference that accompanies "relative change." Second, as the severity of the difference changes (i.e., a twofold versus a fourfold increase), so does the number of people needed to demonstrate an effect. Table 8.13 represents the study size that will give you a SO percent chance of demonstrating that something is going on. These tables are important from both a pre- and a poststudy perspective. For prestudy purposes, if you know the background rate for the particular health problem that interests you and have in mind the type of increase you would like to be able to detect in your population (say a twofold increase, or doubling over normal), then tables 8.12 and 8.13 will tell you the size of the study necessary to have an 80 percent or a SO percent chance of demonstrating such an effect. Therefore you can plan the size of your study to give yourself the degree of power you want. Increasing the number of people in your study will always increase your power. These tables can also help you realize the limitations of your study. For studies involving rare health conditions you must study a large number of people to have even a small chance of seeing sizable increases over background rates. In this situation you must either accept this potential problem and continue with the study, remembering that you don't actually know how great the effect is in your community, or eliminate this section of your study, which unfortunately doesn't help anyone. You may easily find yourself working on something with little hope of success. Seriously evaluate the process beforehand so as to appreciate the work that lies ahead. If, after the fact, you are unable to demonstrate a health problem in your community, remind yourself of the power of your study. Also remember that it is not uncommon for studies with very little power to be conducted and that just because you could not demonstrate a difference between your population and some "normal" population does not necessarily mean no problem exists. Last, if you partition your population into subpopulations based on contributing factors such as smoking history, age, or sex, some of the sensitivity gained from focusing on more susceptible subgroups may in part be offset by a drop in power. Don't go too far in delineating highly specific subgroups of your population. False Positives

A "false positive" occurs when a difference appears to exist between two populations, or between the study population and some standard proportion, when in fact there is no real difference at all. This goes back to the role of natural variation and the fact that we must use some standard for decision making. As discussed earlier, scientists use a p-value of

Table 8.13. Population Sizes for Exposed and Control Groups Needed to Have a SO Percent Chance of Demonstrating a Significant Difference Between Two Populations Relative Increase Over Background Rate Background Rate .00001 .00002 .00004 .00008 .00016 .00032 .00064 .00128 .00256 .005 .01 .02 .04 .05 .10 .15 .20 .25 .30 .35 .40 .45 .50

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

810,000 410,000 200,000 100,000 50,724 25,355 12,671 6,329 3,158 1,572 780 383 185 149 68 41 28 19 14 10 7 5 3

150,000 75,162 37,579 18,787 9,391 4,693 2,344 1,169 583 289 142 69 32 25 10 5 3 1

75,765 37,880 18,938 9,467 4,732 2,364 1,180 588 292 144 70 33 15 12 4 2

49,699 28,848 12,422 6,209 3,103 1,550 773 385 191 94 45 21 9 7 2

36,745 18,371 9,184 4,590 2,293 1,145 571 284 141 69 33 15 6 4 1

29,070 14,533 7,265 3,631 1,814 906 451 224 111 54 26 11 4 3

24,015 12,006 6,001 2,999 1,498 748 373 185 91 44 21 9 3 2

20,442 10,220 5,108 2,553 1,275 636 317 157 77 37 17 7 2 1

Lots of Information

157

.OS to determine whether their results are significant. This means that about five percent of the time it is expected that the results could have occurred by chance alone. The investigators should understand that some fraction of the time their claim that an adverse health effect was "caused" by an agent may not be correct. This is because it is so difficult to prove certain types of material; sometimes you can do no more than collect a significant amount of evidence. The scientific community has come to accept this false-positive rate as an appropriate trade-off between making an incorrect decision (false positive) when no difference exists and doing so when in fact a difference does exist (false negative). With the statistical methods given in this chapter, a false positive rate of one in ten (10 percent) has been accepted. This means that about 10 percent of your comparisons will come out as possibly significant. Therefore, that one or two indicators of health show increased levels compared with some "normal" group does not necessarily mean that a real difference, or problem, exists. Once again this is a trade-off. Ideally you want no false positives, yet you need some standard so you can at least begin to identify possible health problems. As we mentioned in discussing chi-square and reasonable bounds, a p-value of about .10 constitutes a warning that you should look further. With a p-value of less than .02, or if the "reasonable bound" is more than one and onehalf times the bound width away from the normal rate, then a significant amount of evidence exists that a problem (the observed difference in health status between two populations) is real. You need temperance and understanding when analyzing your data. Any comparison that shows a warning flag (p-val ue of .10 or less) should be looked at further to determine if specific subpopulations exist that are experiencing the bulk of the increase in adverse health conditions.

FURTHER STUDY

The next chapter discusses several possible next steps, including pursuing further study by governmental or academic investigators. Yet another alternative is for you to use more rigorous and powerful statistical tools. A paper introducing and explaining such tools, designed for use by laypersons and accompanied by simple computer programs, is available at the following address: Dr. J. I. Rosenblatt Director, Office of Biomathematics 619 Shriners Burns Institute University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston, TX 77555-1220 There will be a small charge to cover shipping and handling costs.

lilliE

WHERE DO YOU GO FROM HERE1 Exploring Options for Further Study and Further Action

Ellen K. Silbergeld

Community health studies are primarily organizing and consciousnessraising tools that are effective as part of an overall community based strategy for change. Their use in this context is discussed elsewhere in this book; this chapter will provide some suggestions for using these studies to find out more or different information on associations between exposures to hazardous waste releases and the health of your community. It is unfortunately the case that most health professionals and public health or environmental officials look upon community health studies with suspicion and disdain; health studies are considered complex undertakings and the professionals tend to doubt that nonprofessionals could actually uncover any valid or useful information. However, some health professionals and government officials who have come to recognize that the "local knowledge" of community residents provide invaluable information frequently unknown to outside investigators. Ideally, at some point, we will be able to forge effective working relationships between alert community health detectives and sympathetic officials. At present, this kind of relationship has been difficult, if not impossible to establish. Now that it is clear where the health survey fits into the overall process, you can move from the thinking phase to the doing phase. After you complete an investigation of health effects in your community, you will be faced with choices for action. Here we assume that you decide something more must be done. This may include obtaining further information on health, getting the source of toxic chemicals cleaned up, or obtaining compensation for damage to property or health. First, and most important, remember your commitments to your friends and neighbors and arrange for a full presentation of study results to all who are potentially affected. Remember to deal sensitively and discreetly with everyone involved. Your choices are obviously influenced by the outcome of the study. In all cases, successful mobilization of resources to attain your goals

Where Do You Go from Here?

159

ultimately depends upon the effectiveness of your organization and your persistence in political action. OBTAINING FURTHER INFORMATION

After completing your health survey, you may want to enlist the assistance of organizations or people with greater resources, more access to medical information, and medical or clinical skills and facilities. Citizens in Alabama and in Michigan involved the Centers of Disease Control in extensive and long-term health studies of DDT and PCBs. In other cases, universities have been sources of experts to assist in analyzing community health studies and in designing further investigations. It is important to realize that as soon as others are involved in further health studies in your community, control and direction pass out of your hands. Their goals and objectives may not be the same as yours, since in many cases they need to satisfy the more exacting criteria of scientific research, and they may be affected by economic and political pressures. It usually takes such organizations a relatively long time to get their further studies under way, in part because they must submit any projects to clinical research committees or other forms of review, and in part because they have to coordinate people or departments within their institutions. Your relations with such outside investigators will be most successful if you keep in mind that both sides have gains and losses in working together. You retain the ultimate power of not agreeing to participate- a powerful weapon in negotiating an acceptable and comprehensive study, because the research can be irreparably damaged if large numbers of people decline to take part. On their side, they have the power to determine the scope of the study, the types of questions to be answered, and the methods of data analysis. You can and should demand to take as active a role as possible in the analysis of the study, but you should respect their need to conduct it independently. The value of their work will largely depend upon others' perception of its objectivity and independence. Before you agree to participate, make sure the goals of the study are acceptable to you and you are satisfied with schedules, procedures, access to information, and the like. Further studies may be necessary to resolve important issues oi concern to your community or to provide various types of information on health effects, such as biopsies to determine individual exposure more precisely. Three types of resources are available for assistance in conducting further research: private medical services (including hospitals, health maintenance organizations, and private physicians); universities, schools of public health, and medical schools; and public health departments in the local, county, state, and federal levels.

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Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

Private medical services can get interested in conducting community health studies, particularly if they are involved in preventive health care and, most importantly, if they are responsible for the medical expenses of many people in the community. For example, the Kaiser Permanente health care organization in Santa Clara County, California has taken part in studying whether there has been an increase in birth defects associated with exposure to 1,1,1-trichloroethane in drinking water. Universities, schools of public health, and medical schools, particularly those with departments of community medicine or epidemiology, may be interested in conducting intensive studies of community health. Among the schools of public health and medical schools that have already been involved in such studies are those of the State University of New York at Binghamton, Johns Hopkins University, Harvard, Boston University, the University of Massachusetts, the University of California at Los Angeles, and the University of Texas. Public health agencies include local public health offices, county and state agencies, and federal Public Health Service (Centers for Disease Control [CDC]). These organizations are set up by law and funded by taxes specifically to protect public health and investigate potential causes of community illness. Often they can bring to their work extensive resources, personnel, and experience. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), a new agency within the Public Health Service, was established by Congress in the Superfund law to provide information, conduct health investigations, maintain registries, and conduct research on the health effects of toxic substances and hazardous wastes in the environment. After a slow beginning, hindered by interference from the White House and EPA, ATSDR is beginning to respond to citizen petitions and other requests for information and health assessments in communities near hazardous waste sites. The agency is required by Congress to study all communities at all National Priority List (NPL) sites, and to respond to petitions from communities for assessments and investigations. In 1989 and 1990, ATSDR conducted over 280 health assessments at 246 NPL sites. In addition, ATSDR is required to establish registries to follow the longterm consequences of exposure to specific chemicals. ATSDR has to date established four registries of persons living in the Missouri dioxin-contaminated communities (including Times Beach) and 13 registries of persons living in communities where drinking water was contaminated with trichloroethylene. Other registries on lead and other solvents are being set up. ATSDR also publishes profiles on chemicals frequently found at hazardous waste sites. These toxicological profiles are fairly good summaries of information on health risks and exposures, but tend to be rather conservative.

Where Do You Go from Here?

161

Communities have had varied experiences with ATSDR and its studies. One problem is that ATSDR rarely conducts any new sampling or analysis at sites, but uses data from state sources, EPA, and responsible parties. This information may not be complete or in an appropriate form for using in an epidemiological study. Also, in many communities, people are understandably wary of working with federal officials on health studies at the same time as they are trying to get action from the federal government towards effective cleanup. While health effects are not a necessary finding in order for cleanup to occur, many communities have experienced situations where the alleged lack of health effects has been cited as a reason to delay or dilute cleanup efforts. It is difficult to recommend a particular source for obtaining assistance with further health studies. Unfortunately, all organizations can be hampered by political and other pressures, and every organization is constrained by the funds available. You need to investigate work the group has done on similar topics, which you do get by requesting copies of publications describing their research. Keep in mind that every study of your community in a sense reduces the probability of further studies, so that as far as possible you need to ensure that the best possible study is done on this second round. It is always useful to notify the federal Public Health Service of your study, because they maintain data banks on health and potential dangers to health. Even if you get no initial action from this source, your request may be acted on later (for example, if other similar results are observed or there is a chemical fire at a dump site). Moreover, your letter serves as official notification of your study and your concerns, which may be useful in the future. GETTING A CLEANUP

One of the main reasons for communities to undertake health studies is the existence of an obvious source of chemical exposure, such as a hazardous waste dump. Even if your health study does not conclusively show adverse health effects in your community, you may still be concerned about getting the dump site cleaned up. To accomplish this you have several resources. The principal one is a federal law, the Comprehensive Rehabilitation and Eiwironmental Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA), better known as Superfund. Your state may have, and certainly should have, its own "Superfund" law to finance the state's share of the federal program and to provide for dump sites not covered by the federal cleanup (such as sites with lower priority in the national ranking system). Superfund provides the EPA with the authority and the funding to

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Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

identify such dump sites, develop action plans, and clean up the waste. Unfortunately, as with anything else, it takes persistence and political organization to get Superfund to work in your community. See chapter 11 for books, hotlines, and organizations concerning Superfund. As a federal program, Superfund can be difficult to activate. Many states now also have their own Superfund programs, designed to provide for dump site cleanups. You need to consult your state department of environmental protection or natural resources to find out the details of such programs and how to activate them. If your state government offices are not helpful, an inquiry through a state representative may be more effective. The Public Health Service has new resources provided through Superfund specifically to conduct health studies and to set up long-term health registries of people likely to have been exposed to toxic chemicals from hazardous waste dump sites. It took a lawsuit by the Environmental Defense Fund to accomplish this, but EPA will soon be forced to release millions of dollars for these purposes. The regional offices of EPA are listed in chapter 11. COMPENSATION If in the course of your study you establish that you or others may have

suffered specific health damage or that your property has depreciated as a result of exposure to toxic substances, you have the right to seek compensation. From a scientific medical point of view, we should make the following points. Legal suits are strongest under these three conditions: • Fairly serious health effects have occurred (children born with birth defects, persons developing liver disease, for example). • Chemical exposure has been directly measured in people or in their food or drinking water. • The chemicals detected are already well defined and, ideally, already regulated or banned as toxic. In situations where potential health effects- such as increased risk of cancer-are alleged, or where toxic substances have not yet been measured directly in people or are a complex mixture not yet fully investigated, it will be more difficult to build a case, but this has successfully been done in at least one instance. At present the federal Superfund law does not provide for this type of compensation (known as victim compensation), though it does contain provisions covering damage to natural resources and the environment.

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There is considerable interest in Congress in expanding Superfund or creating a new law to address the issue of compensation for damage to health by dump site exposure. What communities have sought compensation for chemical exposure? In Kellogg, Idaho, parents sued a smelter company (Gulf and Western) for dumping so much lead in their community that their children were severely poisoned. Several of these cases have been settled out of court. Citizens in Triana, Alabama, have won cases against Olin for dumping DDT in their community and contaminating their food supply. In San Jose, California, families have sued Fairchild Industries for contaminating their drinking water with trichloroethane, holding that several of their children's birth defects were associated with this exposure. There are many citizens' suits against Hooker Chemical Company in Hyde Park and Niagara Falls, New York. To determine the advisability of bringing a legal suit for compensation and to judge the strength of your case, you need legal counsel. In addition, there is at least one organization of lawyers who have specialized in this area of law and can be consulted by citizens: Trial Lawyers for Public Justice in Washington, D.C. NEXT

There is more to do. Chemical contamination of the environment has only recently been recognized as one of the most important concerns of our modern life, in large part as a result of citizens' urgent concern about their communities and their health. Action continues to depend upon the focused political expression of that concern. Action is needed in two directions. First, we must work more quickly and comprehensively to correct the problems caused by past mismanagement. At Price's landfill in New Jersey, trichlorethylene, lead, benzene, and other toxic chemicals have been moving through the ground toward the drinking water supply of Atlantic City. EPA has stockpiled activated carbon to place in municipal water systems in an attempt to remove these chemicals once they reach the aquifer. In Dade County, Florida, chemicals escaping from the 58th Street landfill have already contaminated several well fields that provide drinking water for Hialeah Gardens and the suburbs of Miami. Although those wells have been shut down, the chemicals are continuing to migrate, posing a threat to other water supplies. By not eliminating the source of the contamination, these are policies of retreat. Relying on these policies, we shall surrender more and more of our country and its resources to an irreversible state of chemically induced degradation and loss. It is essential that we move toward poli-

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cies of toxic-use reduction and source control so that risks are not transferred from production sites to waste disposal and ultimately to our air, water, and food. Communities must bring pressure to bear upon polluters to change manufacturing processes upstream before hazardous wastes are generated. Some states now have toxic use reduction policies in law. In addition, industries are now required to disclose how much and what chemicals they are releasing into air, water, and landfills. This information, the Taxies Release Inventory (TRI), must be provided annually by manufacturers to EPA and state agencies. In turn, the inventory is available as an on-line database at the National Library of Medicine, on tapes, and diskettes, and as a printed report. Call the EPA Right-to-Know Hotline (800-535-0202) for more information. The TRI provides very valuable data on taxies releases, which can be important for your health studies as well as for campaigns to reduce taxies in your community. By getting this information in computer format, you can run your own analysis as has been done by the National Wildlife Federation and by students at the University of Maryland, among others. Some community environmental organizations have used this information to publicize particularly large polluters; the light of publicity has already influenced such big chemical companies as DuPont and Monsanto to commit to major reductions in taxies releases. Your community knows firsthand it may not possible to move away soon enough, to close down wells fast enough. What can you do to counter these policies of retreat? • If your state has no Superfund law, work to get one written, proposed, and passed by your state legislature. • If you have identified a source of chemical contamination, work to get it corrected- through federal and state Superfund programs, or through state and federal laws on pollution control if it is an active source.

The other important direction for your efforts is preventative and toward the future. We must prevent the conditions that permit chemical contamination to occur. This means more than keeping industries or disposal facilities out of your community because of their potential to pollute the environment. There are laws and regulations that can effectively prevent dangerous or incompetent operation of such sources. You can • Attend local and state National Pollution Discharge System (NPDES) discharge permit hearings and be actively informed about the conditions under which industries operate in your community. Citizens in

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Michigan have been very effective at overseeing the way Dow Chemical Company will be permitted to discharge its wastes. • Demand public hearings for any new hazardous waste dump, at which the industry or waste disposal company must present details on its operations that might affect your community. Citizens in Calcasieu, Louisiana, and in South Baltimore, Maryland, have used this process to get a great deal of information on the intentions of waste disposal managers in their communities. • Join local and national networks to effectively inform Congress of your support for strong laws to regulate environmental protection and handling-the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Resource Conservation and Recycling Act, and Toxic Substances Control Act all require periodic reauthorization. Widespread citizen pressure will save these laws from being weakened or restricted.

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WHA,. KI.D OF EYIDE.CE DOYOU.EED1 Legal Implications of Acute and Chronic Effects

William E. Townsley

Anyone reading this handbook has probably asked: • Why are my neighbors and I being forced to defend ourselves against a toxic assault taking place in our own homes, schools, churches, parks, and public streets? • Why haven't public health authorities been given the responsibility and the resources to protect us? • Why has the public given the toxic waste generator a major role in ascertaining the harm from its toxic waste? Isn't it rather foolish to assign this responsibility to a party with such an obvious conflict of interest? • Do victims of toxic harm have any legal rights? • What can we, the public, do to better protect ourselves? As we discuss issues raised by these questions, you will better understand why effective protection depends upon adequate identification of toxic harm, its victims, and its causes. As more and more information accumulates on the role a toxic agent plays in causing harm, such a causal role may progress from mere speculation to distinct possibility, onward to probability, and at times even to virtual certainty. The facts necessary to build a reliable bridge between speculation and certainty are often available only to the toxic waste generator (TWG). Therefore, the TWG can prevent, stall, or weaken this evidentiary bridge by neglecting to compile necessary data such as exposure information, and by withholding information needed for epidemiologic studies.' 'Throughout this chapter I will express a number of views and conclusions based on my personal involvement in chronic disease litigation in which many of the nation's leading petrochemical companies gave testimony and other evi-

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The TWG, in its adversary relationship with the public, has often promoted ignorance and uncertainty as to the identity of toxic harm, its victims, and its causes. The resulting ignorance and uncertainty have been effectively used to thwart public regulation of the TWG and enable it to evade its responsibility to toxic-harm victims. In this chapter we will discuss a hypothetical toxic-harm claim so as to illustrate some of the complex legal and factual considerations involved. Our hypothetical claim will involve a victim, exposed both inside and outside the work place, who has chronic disease (cancer) allegedly caused by contamination of the ambient air by neighborhood industries over a long period of time. We should keep in mind that toxic-harm victims, both inside and outside the work place, have fared poorly in obtaining legal relief. Occupational disease kills over 100,000 workers every year and three or four times that many are disabled. Yet only five percent of occupational disease victims are compensated and for that percent the compensation is little and late. While cancer is the toxic harm in our hypothetical claim, we should recognize that cancer may not prove to be the most serious type of damage. We know that there is also reproductive, developmental, and neurological harm, but we have no idea of the magnitude and, unfortunately, too little is being done to understand the nature and proportion of such harm. Not to be dismissed are the controversial acute health effects, as well as enhanced risk of chronic disease, being alleged with greater frequency, particularly by residents near toxic waste sites. It's no surprise that among this large population at risk many people experience debilitating anxiety. While this chapter does not focus on this area of concern, the reader should be aware that recent and current litigation is addressing some of the complex legal issues involved. 2 After presenting and reviewing the hypothetical claim, I will further dence of their activities in ascertaining the cancer dangers arising out of their operations. The industry evidence included toxicity and epidemiological studies, and a paucity of exposure data. 2 Sterling v. Velsicol Chemical Corporation, 855 F2d 1188 (6 Cir. 1988), involving contamination of drinking water from chemical waste site and allowing recovery for fear caused by increased risk of toxic harm, but denying recovery for an enhanced risk of harm where no admissible expert testimony that such harm was probable; Ayer.s v. Jackson Township, 515 A.2d 287 (N.J. 1987), where water supply contaminated by township landfill, with recovery allowed for cost of medical surveillance and nuisance damages, but denied for anxiety and enhanced risk.

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analyze how and why the public has found itself underprotected in dealing with toxic harm. Then I will offer a relatively simple plan as a partial solution. In this chapter I have given few references, since the material is not written for the legal community and scientific material has been adequately discussed and referenced in other chapters. Moreover, my own views and conclusions have been strongly influenced by knowledge and experience gained from personal involvement in cancer litigation. DUTY OF THE TOXIC WASTE GENERATOR TO ASCERTAIN DANGERS

A toxic waste generator (TWG) has a legal duty to ascertain the dangers arising out of its operations, including the disposal of its toxic waste into the atmosphere, into the waterways, and on and into the earth. 3 The TWG can perform this legal duty (1) by identifying, measuring, and recording the exposure creating possible risks; (2) by conducting appropriate toxicity studies; (3) by conducting well-designed epidemiologic studies of populations at risk; (4) by developing and using effective methods of biological monitoring; and (S) by keeping abreast of pertinent medical and scientific literature and new developments. Unfortunately the TWGs, for the most part, have ignored their legal duty to discover the dangers created by their toxic waste. For example, the great majority of commercial chemicals have never been tested for risk of causing chronic disease or for causing reproductive, developmental, and neurological harm. The TWGs have failed to conduct adequate epidemiologic studies of their employees, even in respect to workplace exposure to confirmed animal carcinogens. This breach of duty has prevented an adequate identification of toxic harm, its victims, and its causes. Instead of being punished for their duty breach, the TWGs have been rewarded in at least two respects: in avoiding the expense of performing their duty, and in escaping virtually all responsibility to their toxic-harm victims. STATEMENT OF A HYPOTHETICAL CLAIM

Jim Brewster, age thirty-two, has recently been told by his physician that he has brain cancer, a type identified as glioblastoma multiforme. The prognosis is poor. 3 See Borel v. Fibreboard Paper Products Corp., 403 F2d 1076 (5th Cir. 1976), upholding a duty of a manufacturer to test for dangers and to keep abreast of medical and scientific literature.

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At age five, Jim moved to Jackson, Texas, and his father went to work for Able Chemical Company's large petrochemical complex there. After Jim graduated from Jackson High School, he too went to work for Able Chemical and is now assistant operator of a unit that makes ethyl benzene. Other units at Able make benzene, styrene, vinyl chloride, and polyvinyl chloride. From age five until he was about fourteen, Jim lived about one mile northwest of Able Chemical. His other two residences have been two and three miles from Able. Adjoining Able is Baker Chemical Company, the other substantial petrochemical complex in Jackson that also produces the products named above. Jim's residences have been approximately the same distance from Baker as from Able. Jim is aware that a recent epidemiologic study of Able workers by a government agency revealed an incidence of brain cancer significantly above that in the general population. Also, another epidemiologic study of a similar but distant petrochemical plant showed a significant excess of brain cancer. Both Able Chemical and the distant company did their own epidemiologic studies and reached a contrary conclusion, finding that no such excess existed. Jim talked to a lawyer who had recently won a workers' compensation case for the widow of an Able Chemical worker who died from brain cancer. After the lawyer reviewed the pertinent data and records, he told Jim that he had a good chance of winning a workers' compensation claim and perhaps even a fair chance on a traditional suit against Able and Baker jointly. Jim's lawyer saw a chance to prove that a contributing cause to Jim's brain cancer was his exposure, both inside and outside the work place, to the carcinogenic waste of Able and Baker, which contaminated the ambient air. With this simplified version of the facts, let's examine some of the evidence problems and some pertinent principles to be applied to the facts. RECONSTRUCTING PAST TOXIC EXPOSURE

Jim's lawyer will consult with various scientists (such as industrial hygienists, toxicologists, industrial chemists, meteorologists) to assist him in the difficult and expensive task of reconstructing, as available evidence permits, the toxic exposure from both Able Chemical and Baker Chemical to which Jim was subjected from 1955 (when he moved to Jackson) until his brain cancer was diagnosed in 1982. Based on experience, Jim's lawyer is not surprised to learn that very little air sampling and analysis for specific compounds has ever been

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performed in Jackson, and that the few exposure data available are virtually useless. Likewise, the air monitoring data within the Able and Baker facilities have been found grossly inadequate. If the emissions data were reasonably accurate during the disease latency and exposure period (twenty-seven years), and if necessary meteorological data were available, Jim's primary exposure expert might undertake atmospheric modeling in an effort to scientifically quantify past exposures. While such modeling may be too difficult and expensive in most cases, expert evidence on the atmospheric transport of industrial pollutants will help explain the disease risk to populations outside the work place. The attorney, through court procedures, will obtain from Able Chemical (and also Baker Chemical) a plot plan of the Jackson plant(s) showing various process units, storage facilities, shipping locations, and all emission points; a pertinent history on each process unit since 1955; pertinent material balances; emissions inventories filed with the Texas Air Control Board; air emissions data furnished to federal agencies; and all air monitoring records on select compounds. The exposure expert will review any government studies (by EPA, OSHA, NIOSH, or state and local regulatory agencies) of emissions from the plants of Able and Baker and from other plants with similar process units. Some toxic substances have known odor thresholds and have such distinct odors that many workers can recognize their presence. These workers may testify about the existence and frequency of such detectable odors in the areas where Jim lived and moved about. Jim's attorney will be able to secure a broad estimate of the carcinogenic waste of Able and Baker that contaminated the ambient air where Jim lived and worked. Such an estimate may include total hydrocarbons as well as select compounds that are known or likely carcinogens. The exposure data, once compiled, must be reviewed by Jim's cancer causation expert, who will determine whether they are adequate, when considered together with epidemiologic, toxicologic, and other data, to prove (more likely than not) that such exposure was a contributing, legal cause of Jim's brain tumor. Able and Baker may complain about the imprecision of the reconstructed exposure data, but such complaints should fall on deaf ears. After all, they had a duty to ascertain the dangers arising out of their operations, and had they performed such duty they necessarily would have compiled the exposure data, which would then have been available (by subpoena) to the toxic-harm victims. In other words, after breaching its duty to compile such exposure data, a TWG should not be heard to complain about the quality of the reconstructed data. In the

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interest of justice, the court should appoint a master to reconstruct the exposure data at the expense of the derelict TWG. The master (master in chancery) is a judicial officer appointed by courts of equity to assist the court, including hearing testimony and making reports which, when approved by the presiding judge, become the decision of the court. We will assume that the exposure data have been reconstructed, that the court has found the methods satisfactory, and that the data have been admitted into evidence. PROVING LEGAL CAUSATION

Jim will be required to prove that his exposure to the toxic waste of Baker Chemical (while outside the work place) and Able Chemical (both inside Able and outside) was a legal cause of his brain tumor. Other facts must also be established, but proving legal causation is a major hurdle for the toxic-harm victim. Under some legal theories (e.g., strict liability) the claimant must prove only that the exposure in question was a "producing cause," while under other legal theories (e.g., negligence) proving "proximate cause" will be required. There may be several legal causes of an event or condition (such as toxic harm). To prove "producing cause" some jurisdictions require only proof of "cause-in-fact," which means the harm would not have occurred at the time it did but for the exposure in question; other jurisdictions require proof that the cause was a "substantial factor" in bringing about such harm; and still others require both cause-in-fact and substantial factor evidence. To prove "proximate cause," the claimant, in addition to proving producing cause, must also show that the TWG should have foreseen that the same or similar harm might reasonably have occurred because of such exposure. Some jurisdictions will permit the claimant to lump the combined effect of the toxic exposures of the various TWG defendants and then prove (more likely than not) that such combined effect was a legal cause of the harm, leaving it to each defendant to separate, if it can, its contribution, if any, to the total toxic harm. However, other jurisdictions will still require the claimant to prove the contribution of each TWG defendant to the total harm. Jim must present expert opinion evidence that his toxic exposure from Able and Baker caused his brain tumor. The expert• may acknowl•There is a disagreement among the various jurisdictions as to whether a Ph.D. expert will be allowed to give an opinion on individual causation even though his qualifications may be vastly superior to those of a treating physician on the issue of causation.

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edge that several factors probably contributed to Jim's cancer and may be of the opinion that one of those factors was Jim's exposure to the toxic waste of Able and Baker that contaminated the ambient air. Of course no one can say with absolute certainty what caused Jim's brain tumor, and the law does not require such certainty. Jim must only prove (through his expert) that the toxic exposure was more likely than not a contributing, legal cause. Epidemiologic Studies

While not always the best, epidemiologic studies are the most acceptable evidence of cancer causation by toxic exposures. These studies have been described in earlier chapters. Epidemiologic studies may link a certain type of cancer with a certain compound (e.g., leukemia with benzene), or with a certain industry (e.g., brain cancer with the petrochemical industry), or with a certain occupation (e.g., respiratory cancer with pipefitting). The design of an epidemiologic study is critical and vitally affects validity. For any epidemiologic study to merit serious consideration in a legal setting, it should be made available for peer review; that is, be subject to critical review by other epidemiologists. The strength of a positive epidemiologic study is expressed in statistical terms. Scientific significance (high degree of certainty) and legal significance (more likely than not) are not the same thing. s A non positive epidemiologic study should not be regarded as evidence that no risk exists, but rather should be considered as failing to establish a risk. The courts are now accepting (as they should) positive epidemiologic studies as supporting an inference of a causal connection between exposure and toxic harm. 6 The TWG can be expected to oppose such use of statistical evidence when unfavorable, since it may make the TWG responsible to its toxic-harm victims. The TWG, of course, wants to avoid this responsibility and can successfully do so as long as the victims are denied sufficient causation evidence. Jim's causation expert, as a basis for his professional opinion, may rely upon several types of evidence, one being government epidemiologic studies showing a significant excess of brain cancer among petro5 Some courts have attempted to define the degree of probability of the causal association in an epidemiological study before such study can be utilized to support a finding of causation. See the ill-considered opinion of Brock v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc., 874 F.2d 307 (5 Cir. 1989). 6 Some courts now hold that causation must be supported by some epidemiological data.

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chemical workers. The expert for Able and Baker will be critical of the government studies and will seek to use the industry-sponsored epidemiologic studies to rebut causation. The industry-sponsored studies will lack credibility if their design is poor or if their data have not been made available for peer review. Jim's expert may strengthen his opinion with epidemiologic studies not involving the petrochemical industry or the implicated compounds. An example would be studies showing that neighborhood populations are subjected to the same risks (though to a lesser degree as distance increases) as the workers within a given plant. The court (judge) will determine whether the causation expert can give an opinion, and if so, whether the judge can use such epidemiologic studies in arriving at an opinion. The jury, by contrast, will determine the weight to be given any such study. The jury can accept a study's findings as factual, reject the study in toto, or accept some parts and reject others. Such evaluation will be reflected in the weight the jury gives to the opinion of the causation expert. Toxicity Studies Toxicity studies may be relevant in proving that the carcinogenic waste of Able and Baker was a legal cause of Jim's brain cancer. Significantly, our nation makes major public health decisions based on the results of animal studies. This shows our high degree of confidence in the validity of extrapolation from animals to man. In our hypothetical case, Jim's causation expert may use toxicity studies, along with other evidence, to strengthen his opinion on the causal link between Jim's brain tumor and his toxic exposure to the chemical waste of Able and Baker. In some instances a causation expert would seem justified in relying upon toxicity studies alone to support an opinion of legal causation. 7 An example would be where an animal carcinogen is very potent, the cancer victim has a history of substantial exposure to that particular carcinogen, the victim's cancer is similar (organ and type) to that induced by the carcinogen in animal species, and the type of cancer is not common. Epidemiologic studies remain the evidence of choice even though they, unfortunately, require a victim body count. Yet, well-designed two-year animal studies may have greater overall validity than many epidemiologic studies, particularly those epidemiologic studies with inadequate exposure data and insufficient power. The uncertainty in extrapolation is arguably smaller than the uncertainty from confounding factors, uncontrolled conditions, inadequate exposure data, and in7 However, a growing number of cases have flatly stated that animal studies alone are not sufficient to support an opinion of causation.

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sufficient power that beset many epidemiologic studies. Where animal studies of a chemical prove to be nonpositive, the TWG may argue that such studies are valid evidence of the safety of the substance. However, when such studies prove positive, the TWG will be critical of extrapolation, both as to species, and as to dosage. Again we see the TWG, in an adversary relationship with the public, seeking to place the burden of uncertainty on its potential victims. While toxicity studies, standing alone, may not support an opinion of legal causation in Jim's case, such studies will give added strength to an opinion on causation. Toxicity data will show that certain compounds in the toxic waste of Able and Baker have an affinity for the brain. Moreover, one of the compounds (vinyl chloride monomer) is a potent animal (and human) carcinogen, with the brain as one of the target organs. Also, styrene would be suspected of making a contribution because of its similarity to vinyl chloride in chemical structure and because styrene (or its metabolites) is a likely carcinogen and/or promotor. Jim's causation expert may not wish to isolate vinyl chloride as a legal cause but may prefer to implicate the total chemical emissions, which contain not only known and suspected carcinogens, but also a number of untested (or inadequately tested) compounds. The expert can correctly point out that, while vinyl chloride monomer is very likely a causal factor, there are still other carcinogens and promoters in such toxic waste that will likewise make their contribution to Jim's brain tumor. Structure-Activity Data

The causation expert, having a background in toxicology, knows that the great majority of chemical compounds found in the environment have never been tested for carcinogenicity. This failure to test has created a need to predict, as scientifically as possible, the toxic effects of untested chemicals. This need has been partially met by studying the reactivity of untested compounds with DNA and by classifying the various chemicals according to their molecular structure. These predictive tools cannot support a conclusion that a. given chemical is or is not a carcinogen, but such characteristics can be considered when evaluating toxicity and epidemiologic studies. The Role of Principles of Carcinogenesis in Legal Causation

All doses of carcinogens, no matter how small, likely contribute to the total carcinogenic effect. Jim's expert may point out that the effect of

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multiple carcinogens is usually at least additive, and in some instances is synergistic. This means that Jim's exposure to vinyl chloride, benzene, and other carcinogens in the toxic waste of Able and Baker likely had a causal role in his brain tumor. Moreover, there may have been noncarcinogenic substances present that played a causal role as cancer promoters. Keep in mind that most, if not all, carcinogens are also cancer promoters. However, not all promoters are carcinogens. The intensity and duration of the dosage of carcinogens affect the latency period of cancer- the time between initial exposure and tumor formation. The greater the cumulative dosage of carcinogens, the shorter the latency period; and of course, a reduced dosage will extend the latency period. Proving legal causation is made easier by the wellaccepted principle of carcinogenesis that dosage directly affects the cancer latency period. By this principle, Jim's expert can state with confidence that Jim's brain tumor would not have appeared when it did except for his toxic exposure. In other words, without the exposure from Able and Baker, Jim's tumor would have appeared either at a later date or not at all. Cause-in-fact is thereby established. THEORIES OF LIABILITY OF TOXIC WASTE GENERATORS WHO CONTAMINATE THE AMBIENT AIR

Society has an ongoing role of declaring and balancing interrelated rights and duties among parties. The "rights" protect one's person and property and confer certain privileges. The "duties" delineate one's responsibility when one's acts and omissions affect the rights of others. Jim would claim a right, at least in his own home, to breathe air not contaminated with the carcinogenic waste of Able Chemical and Baker Chemical. Jim's remedy for an infringement of that right might be of an equitable nature, of a legal nature, or both. An injunction to prevent such contamination of the ambient air with known carcinogens would be characterized as an equitable remedy. Monetary damages for any proven harm from such contamination would be called a legal remedy. While society permits the toxic waste generator to discharge, at least to some extent, its carcinogenic waste into the environment, such a license does not insulate the TWG against liability for monetary damages to its toxic-harm victims but merely protects it against certain equitable remedies such as injunctions. In resolving disputes involving harm from the interaction between "rights and duties," society can be said to play a role in the allocation of risks. In allocating risks, "strict liability" is applied in some situations. Thus the risk is placed on the party who causes the harm. The victim will still be required to prove certain facts, including legal causation, and the party causing the harm still has avail-

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able certain defenses. Strict liability may be applicable to toxic harm caused by a TWG in some circumstances and not in others. The rules in identical situations often differ among the various states. This means that Jim may have an effective legal remedy in Texas but not in Louisiana. Differently stated, Able and Baker may be strictly liable to its toxicharm victims in one state but not in another. Of course, the balance of political power among the parties may affect the allocation of risks. Several legal theories employ the strict liability concept. In our example involving contamination of Jackson's ambient air with carcinogens, strict liability theories would include trespass (an intentional invasion by a physical agent), some forms of nuisance, ultrahazardous activities, and what may be simply called a pollution tort for intentional invasions. In our example the word "intentional" would simply mean an awareness by Able and Baker that their activities necessarily involved the discharge of chemical waste into the ambient air. The trespass theory is an attractively simple remedy for contamination of the ambient air. In different states trespass has been both applied and rejected. 8 A principal inadequacy of "ultrahazardous activity" as a basis for strict liability lies in the uncertainty whether a given activity is to be deemed ultrahazardous. Such uncertainty could be reduced with a definition including all activities creating a foreseeable risk of toxic harm. Where toxic harm is caused by the migration of a TWG's toxic waste through air or water, the law of nuisance is used most frequently to determine its responsibility, if any. Nuisance law is ordinarily invoked where one party uses his property (e.g., for the operation of a chemical plant) in a manner that disturbs another party in the use and enjoyment of his property. Some types of interference constitute a private nuisance as a matter of law (e.g., an interference prohibited by statute). Other types of interference may constitute a private nuisance only when deemed unreasonable (e.g., odors). Where reasonable people may differ on whether a given interference is unreasonable, the dispute will be resolved by the fact finder (e.g., jury). The consensus on reasonableness may differ in different areas. If a TWG, in disposing of its toxic waste, interferes with the enjoyment and use of public property, a public nuisance may be found to exist. An individual can recover on the basis of a public nuisance only when the harm is different from that experienced by the general public. Liability based on nuisance may be affected by whether a release of toxic waste is intentional (e.g., for normal process, fugitive and storage •Martin v. Reynolds Metals Co., 221 Ore. 86, P 2d 790, 974 (1959), applying trespass; Arvidson v. Reynolds Metal Co., 125 F. Suppl. 481 (S.D. Wash. 1954), rejecting trespass theory.

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emissions from a chemical plant) or unintentional (e.g., from an explosion). Court decisions are often inconsistent in describing the nature and scope of nuisance law and its application to given facts. Referring again to our hypothetical case, we will assume that Jim's brain tumor was caused by Able and Baker's contaminating the ambient air with low-level doses of carcinogenic substances. Jim will claim that the invasion of his home with carcinogens unleashed by Able and Baker constituted an absolute nuisance with strict liability on their part for his resulting brain tumor. Moreover, Jim will claim that such carcinogenic contamination of Jackson's ambient air created a public nuisance resulting in special harm to him. On the other hand, Able and Baker will point out that their operations have economic benefits for the city of Jackson and its residents; that their operations are in all respects lawful; that the public regulates, by issuing permits, the disposal of their toxic waste and that they have at all relevant times been in compliance with their permits; and that therefore they have acted as reasonable and prudent chemical companies in their release of carcinogenic substances into the ambient air of Jackson. Negligence law is commonly used in balancing conflicting rights (or allocating risks) where one party, in the use of his property, causes harm to another. "Reasonableness" is the key concept in resolving such conflicts. Negligence is defined as the failure to exercise ordinary care- the care a prudent party would ordinarily exercise under the same or similar circumstances. "Reasonable" persons may differ among themselves on whether certain conduct by a party is reasonable or unreasonable. Under negligence law a party is responsible only for the unforeseeable consequences of his conduct. No liability attaches for consequences that are remote or inconceivable. New technology and its effect often challenge the capacity of existing legal theories to resolve newly created conflicts. Usually a traditional theory is sufficiently adaptable, but sometimes a new theory will offer greater clarity and less confusion by directly addressing the conflict. An outstanding opinion in a Texas case formulated an express legal theory on harm from intentional air and water pollution. 9 In factual disputes, the controlling facts must be determined by the judge or jury. A single set of facts may give rise to more than one legal basis of liability. Ordinarily a claimant can allege alternative facts and as many causes of action (legal theories providing remedies) as the alleged facts may confer. 9 Atlas Chemical Industry, Inc. v. Anderson, 514 S.W.2d 309 (Tex. Civ. App. 1974) affirmed 524 S.W.2d 681 (Tex. 1975).

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What legal theories will Jim use against Able and Baker? Jim's first choice may be to ask that strict liability be applied for a pollution tort arising from harm caused by the intentional discharge of carcinogens into the ambient air. A second choice would be to contend that the disposal of carcinogenic waste is an ultrahazardous activity and that therefore strict liability attaches. A third choice would be for Jim to contend that Able and Baker committed a trespass by setting in motion carcinogenic waste, knowing that it would invade nearby homes, churches, schools, and other places where people had a right to be. 10 A fourth choice would be to argue that such contamination of the ambient air with carcinogenic substances created both a public and a private nuisance. A fifth basis of recovery against Able and Baker would be to claim that Jim's harm was caused by negligence on their part, particularly as to the nature and quantity of the carcinogenic waste showered on the town of Jackson. Regardless of the legal theories used, Jim (through his attorney and experts) should identify and roughly quantify the carcinogenic waste of Able and Baker to which he was exposed and then prove (more likely than not) that such exposure was a legal cause of his brain tumor. FINDING A LAWYER FOR THE TOXIC HARM VICTIM

In most areas where toxic harm occurs, there will probably be one or more lawyers who will have the experience, resources, and motivation to handle any indicated litigation. Usually such a lawyer will be available for a conference without cost or obligation to the victim. If the damages are significant and there is a fair chance of recovery, the lawyer will ordinarily be willing to take the case with his fee being an agreed percentage of any recovery; if there is no recovery, then no fee is paid. The lawyer chosen should have the experience and resources to adequately handle personal injury and disease litigation and preferably should have experience in preparing and presenting evidence establishing past toxic exposure and evidence supporting a causal link between that exposure and the plaintiff's harm. A lawyer with the desired qualifications may be identified through publicity, or by making inquiries of experienced scientific experts, of representatives of environmental organizations, personal attorneys, and knowledgeable courthouse workers. Some lawyers accept toxic-harm claims and then refer the cases to other lawyers who perform the work under an agreement whereby the fee is split. Since toxic claims are relatively new, complex, and expen10

Atlas Chemical Industry, Inc. v. Anderson, supra.

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sive, a lawyer will sometimes accept a case directly that he would turn down as a referral. Therefore the victim may be better served by contracting only with the lawyer who will perform all or a significant portion of the legal services. HOW DID THINGS GET THIS WAY'l

The discussion of our hypothetical case illustrates the complexity of litigating a toxic-harm claim. Such complexity, together with the enormous expense, explains why so few claims have been made. The exception has been in the case of asbestos related disease. We have allowed toxic waste generators {TWGs) to inflict, with virtual impunity, toxic harm on millions of people as well as to do inestimable environmental harm. Kept powerless by political inaction, we, for many years, permitted our ambient air, surface water, groundwater, and the good earth to be freely appropriated as random dump sites for toxic waste. When enough influential citizens sensed the ongoing harm and got a glimpse of the specter of a toxic avalanche with the potential for doing us all in, the public gained sufficient political strength for regulatory legislation. This legislation, as expected, was opposed by the TWGs, who apparently had come to view themselves as entitled to unleash their toxic waste into the environment without restraint. As the evidence of toxic harm mounted and the potential consequences of the toxic avalanche became better perceived, more regulatory legislation was enacted to protect public health and the environment. While the public has greatly benefitted from the major environmental laws, the TWGs have significantly reduced the laws' effectiveness with their vast legal and political resources. The TWGs, of course, do not want toxic harm to occur, but their concern for such harm remains subservient to their desire to generate and dispose of toxic waste with as little restraint and responsibility as possible. WE EXPECT TOO MUCH OF THE TOXIC WASTE GENERATOR

The toxic waste generator feels threatened by the discovery that its operations may contribute to disease. When vinyl chloride monomer became recognized as a carcinogen, the affected TWGs assumed a defensive adversary posture, minimizing the risk and opposing regulatory efforts by the federal government. The TWGs have done little to discover cancer morbidity or suggested reproductive harm among populations exposed to vinyl chloride monomer. Brain cancer has been suggested as a risk among petrochemical workers producing vinyl chloride, but this suggestion instantly prompted an adversary reaction by the af-

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fected TWGs, followed by their preparing rebuttal evidence from "proprietary" data. The TWGs again and again have effectively resisted public regulations aimed at preventing toxic harm. They spent millions of dollars to fight reduced benzene exposure and in recent years have spent millions to weaken environmental regulations such as the Clean Air Act. Some TWGs have openly obstructed public investigations of cancer dangers to their own workers. In fact, the TWGs have even opposed efforts by their own workers to investigate disease dangers in the work place. We, the public, have expected too much of the toxic waste generators. It is naive to expect a serious effort by the TWGs to use part of their profits to discover disease dangers that would invite regulatory action and liability to their toxic-harm victims. Through purposeful neglect, the TWG can promote ignorance and uncertainty about toxic harm. Such neglect, though not benign, is something the corporate entity can live with. The TWG is a private corporate entity. Its mission is profit, and it resists detracting factors. The public should realistically accept the TWG for what it is. Consistent with its corporate nature and mission, the TWG has made it abundantly clear that it wants an arrangement with society whereby the TWG has these rights: to engage in industrial activities creating risks of toxic harm; to unilaterally determine the acceptable levels of exposure to its toxic waste, thereby avoiding public regulation and interference; to avoid any penalty for breaching its common-law duty to discover disease dangers from its operations; to place the burden of toxic harm on the victims and the public; and to prevent others from discovering toxic harm by withholding information needed to compile exposure data, identify victims, and establish causal relations. Once the public accepts the corporate nature of the TWG, we can proceed to fashion a plan offering some measure of protection against toxic harm and then, with much greater frequency, make the TWG responsible to its toxic-harm victims. A PROPOSAL TO BETTER PROTECT THE PUBLIC

To better identify toxic harm and to allocate its cost, a special tax should be levied against the toxic waste generator to finance the public performance of its common-law duty. After all, creating risks of widespread toxic harm is not an absolute right, but rather a privilege that society can withhold or confer with reasonable conditions. One such condition should be compelling the TWG to disclose all information helpful in compiling exposure data on populations at risk and identifying toxicharm victims. Public health investigators should compile such exposure

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data and should conduct appropriate studies to ascertain any causal relation between such exposure and harm. If the public took over the TWG's common-law duty, data worthy of confidence would be created, and the TWG would be freed of a troublesome conflict of interest. For the time being the TWG should be penalized, but fairly so, for having legally wronged its victims. One act of legal restitution would be for the courts to appoint masters, at the TWG's expense, to compile exposure data where there is reasonable basis for believing a plaintiff victim has sustained harm that may have been caused by toxic exposure created by the defendant TWG. Such exposure data, with appropriate modifications, could thereafter be utilized by other plaintiffs. Because of its breach of duty, the TWG should be denied (in legal jargon, estopped) use of the statute of limitations to defeat the legal rights of a victim or his beneficiaries. The breach of duty by the TWG has left plaintiffs with evidence problems in proving legal causation. Fairness would be served by applying judicial innovations as well as traditional legal tools such as presumptions to such evidence problems.

CONCLUSION

The burden of toxic harm will continue to increase for these reasons: • The continuing generation of enormous quantities of toxic waste. • The vast quantities of toxic waste currently in the environment, including innumerable dump sites where such waste is either doing its damage or is on standby, threatening harm. • The many ultimate victims from past exposure where incipient, time-dependent disease is still evolving toward morbidity. • The legacy of accumulating inheritable mutations. We are in dire need of a public strategy to reduce the burden of toxic harm and to do justice to the individual victims. Our society prides itself on concern for the individual, including the protection of life, the integrity of mind and body, and the defense of property. This societal protection has been grossly inadequate to cope with the mounting toxic onslaught of the past thirty-five years. We have failed to adequately identify the various forms of toxic harm, and we remain ignorant of its magnitude. We are not likely to secure better protection until we arm ourselves with the data necessary to reveal the nature and extent of this toxic harm. Of elementary importance (and the most neglected) is the necessary exposure data. Such data are needed to better identify the population at risk, to improve the design

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of toxicity studies, and to enhance the design and evaluation of epidemiologic studies. We, the public, have utterly failed our toxic-harm victims. We have naively entrusted the TWGs to create and record vital exposure data and to properly study their employee populations at risk. Predictably, the TWGs have avoided programs to ascertain disease dangers. Identifying toxic dangers would only invite regulation and liability. Instead the TWG, for its own economic protection, has used its resources to exonerate its accused chemicals. I propose a new policy whereby dependable data would be created to effectively identify and prevent toxic harm. Such data would be created by public health personnel at TWG expense. The newly created data, together with a just, innovative judiciary would offer toxic-harm victims legal relief with much greater frequency. The cost of toxic harm to the extent of such relief, plus the cost of creating the necessary data, would finally be properly allocated. Once the cost is fixed, the TWG, consistent with its purpose of profit, will more seriously undertake prevention measures to reduce its own financial burden.

RESOURCE GUIDE

Sabrina F. Strawn If you are just now wanting to learn more about hazardous substanceswhat they are and who else is concerned about them- this guide will help direct you to all sorts of information sources. If you are already involved, you will appreciate these words to the novice: No one can possible know all about toxic substances. The subject area is enormous and information gaps still exist. This is intended only as a guide, not a mandatory reading list. Moreover, the most useful resources often are personal contacts.

PUBLICATIONS AIR EMERGENCY PlANNING AND COMMUNITY RIGHT-TO-KNOW EPIDEMIOLOGY HAZARDOUS WASTE- EFFECTS HAZARDOUS WASTE- MANAGEMENT INCINERATION INFORMATION SOURCES ORGANIZING PESTICIDES RISK ASSESSMENT STATUTES, REGUlATIONS AND LEGAL ISSUES TOXIC CHEMICALS (see HAZARDOUS WASTE) WATER WORKPlACE ISSUES PUBLisHERS' ADDRESSES PERIODICALS OTHER RESOURCES HOTLINES

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COMPUTER-RELATED SERVICES ORGANIZATIONS U.S. GOVERNMENT OFFICES

PUBLICATIONS Air

Michael H. Brown, Toxic Cloud: The Poisoning ofAmerica's Air, New York: Harper & Row, 1987. ($9.95)

Emergency Planning and Community-Right-to-Know

See also STATUTES. Chemical Manufacturers Association, several publications and videos. Call or write for titles and costs. Citizens Fund, Poisons in Our Neighborhoods: Toxic Pollution in the United States, Washington, D.C.: Citizens Fund, 1990. ($25.00) Susan G. Hadden, A Citizen's Right to Know: Risk Communications and Public Policy, Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1989. ($28.50) Stephen Lester, et al., Using your Right to Know, Arlington, Virginia: Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous Wastes, 1989. ($9.95) Carol Steinsapir and others, Hazardous Neighbors? New York, NY: Community Environmental Health Center, Hunter College School of Health Sciences, 1989. (5.00) U.S. Department of Transportation, Emergency Response Guidebook. n.p., n.d. (free) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Pesticides and Toxic Substances, several publications including annual reports on the taxies release inventory. Call the SARA Hotline for information. Working Group on Community Right To Know, newsletter and several packets. Call or write for titles and costs.

Epidemiology

Phil Brown, "Popular Epidemiology: Community Response to ToxicWaste Induced Disease" Science, Technology and Human Values, val. 12, (Summer/Fall 1987) pp. 78-85 . Reprinted in Environmental Health Monthly, val. 2 (February 1990). Obtain from the Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous Waste. Gary D. Friedman, Primer of Epidemiology, 3rd edition, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1987. ($19.95) John R. Goldsmith, Environmental Epidemiology: Epidemiological Investi-

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gation of Community Health Problems, Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press, 1986. ($110) Philip Hauser, Social Statistics in Use, New York: Russell Sage Founda· tion, 1975. ($37.50) Abraham M. Lilienfeld and David E. Lilienfeld, Foundations of Epidemiology, 2nd edition, New York: Oxford University Press, 1980. ($22.95 paper) Judith S. Mausner and Anita K. Bahn, Epidemiology: An Introductory Text, 2nd edition, Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1985. ($29.95) Brian MacMahon and Thomas F. Pugh, Epidemiology: Principles and Methods, Boston: Little, Brown, 1970. ($29.50) Proceedings of the National Conference on Clustering of Health Events, Atlanta, Georgia, February 1989, American Journal of Epidemiology, vol. 132, supplement no. 1, 1990. Lynn A. Gloecker Ries, et al., Cancer Statistics Review, 1973-1987, Bethesda, Maryland: National Cancer Institute, 1990, Pub. No. 90-2789. (free) Dona Schneider, Completeness and Accuracy of Cancer Mortality and Incidence Data, Monticello, Illinois: Vance Bibliographies, 1989. ($6.25) Janet Tanur, et al., Statistics: A Guide to the Unknown, 3rd edition, n.p.: Brooks-Cole, 1989. ($16.95)

Hazardous Waste-EHects Julian B. Andelman and Dwight W. Underhill, Health Effects from Hazardous Waste Sites, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1987. ($49.95) Nicholas A. Ashford and Claudia S. Miller, Chemical Sensitivity: A Report to the New Jersey Department of Health, 1989. (available from National Center for Environmental Health Strategies, $15.00 non-members) Alvin C. Bronstein and Phillip L. Currance, Emergency Care for Hazardous Materials Exposure, St. Louis: C.V. Mosby Company, 1988. ($22.95) Earon S. Davis, ed., Ecological Illness Law Report, vols. 1-5, 1983-1988. Write for prices. Other publications also available. Michael Edelstein, Contaminated Communities: The Social and Psychological Impacts of Residential Toxic Exposure, Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1988. ($33.00) SamuelS. Epstein, Carl Pope, and Lester 0. Brown, Hazardous Waste in America, San Francisco: Sierra Club, n.d .. ($12.95 non-members) Ernest Hodgson, et al., eds., Dictionary of Toxicology, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1988. ($73.95) Peter Montague, Hazardous Waste News, Princeton, N.J.: Environmental Research Foundation, weekly newsletter. ($18/year) National Research Council, Committee on Environmental Epidemiology, Environmental Epidemiology, Volume 1: Public Health and Haz-

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ardous Wastes, Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1991. ($29.95) National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards, 1990, (DHHS (NIOSH) Publication No. 90-117). (free) Janette Sherman, Chemical Exposure and Disease: Diagnostic and Investigative Techniques, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1988. ($52.95) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Toxicology Handbook, Rockville, Maryland: Government Institutes, Inc. n.d. ($49.00) Arthur C. Upton, Theodore Kneip, and Paolo Toniolo, "Public Health Aspects of Toxic Chemical Disposal Sites," Annual Review of Public Health 10:1-25, 1989. Henry M. Vyner, Invisible Trauma: The Psychosocial Effects of the Invisible Environmental Contaminants, Lexington, Massachusetts: Lexington Books, 1988. ($29.00) Hazardous Waste-Management

Ronny J. Coleman and Kara Hewson Williams, Hazardous Material Dictionary, Lancaster, PA: Technomic Publishing Co., Inc., 1988. ($39.00) Paul and Ellen Connett, Waste Not, Canton, New Jersey: Work on Waste, weekly newsletter. ($25/year) L. Epstein, Leaking Underground Storage Tanks- Secondary Containment, Washington, D.C.: Environmental Defense Fund, 1988. ($2.50) Harry M. Freeman, Standard Handbook of Hazardous Waste Treatment and Disposal, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988. ($95.00) Benjamin A. Goldman et al., Hazardous Waste Management: Reducing the Risk, Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 1985. ($64.95 cloth, $34.95 paper) Ben Gordon and Peter Montague, A Citizen's Toxic Waste Audit Manual, Chicago, Illinois: Greenpeace, 1989. ($5.00 donation) W. Gordon and J. Bloom, Deeper Problems: Limits to Underground Injection as a Hazardous Waste Disposal Method, New York: Natural Resources Defense Council, 1985. ($7.50) Roger D. Griffin, Principles of Hazardous Materials Management, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, Inc., 1989. ($45.00) S. Guyer and D. Roe, Approaches to Source Reduction of Hazardous Waste: Practical Guidance from Existing Policies and Programs, Washington, D.C.: Environmental Defense Fund, 1988. ($30 non-members) Hazardous Waste Handbook Series, five volumes, New York: Executive Enterprises Publications Co., Inc. 1989. ($175) Volume I Hazardous Waste Generator Obligations Under RCRA Volume II PCB Management Under TSCA Volume III Health Risk Assessment at Superfund Sites

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Volume IV Managing Underground Storage Tanks Volume V Hazardous Waste Regulations: Enforcement and Liability Thomas E. Higgins, Hazardous Waste Minimization Handbook, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1989. ($49.95) Household Wastes: Issues and Opportunities, Concern, Inc., n.d. ($5.50) Gary F. Lindgren, Managing Industrial Hazardous Waste, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1989. ($59.95) Peter Montague, What Chemicals Each Industry Uses, Princeton, New Jersey: Environmental Research Foundation, 1989. ($25.00) Natural Resources Defense Council, et al., Hazardous Waste Surface Impoundments: The Nation's Most Serious and Neglected Threat to Groundwater, New York: Natural Resources Defense Council, 1983. ($5.00) Office of Technology Assessment, Assessing Contractor Use in SuperfundBackground Report, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1989, #052-003-01147-6. ($2.50) --,Are We Cleaning Up? Ten Superfund Case Studies-Special Report, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1988, #052-00301122-1. ($3.75) - - , Coming Clean: Superfund Problems Can Be Solved, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1989, #052-003-01166-2. ($10.00) - - , From Pollution to Prevention: A Progress Report on Waste Reduction -Special Report, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1987, #052-003-01071-2. ($2.75) - - , Serious Reduction of Hazardous Waste, National Technical Information Service, 1986, #PB 87-139 622/AS. ($38.00, summary available free from Office of Technology Assessment.) Russell W. Phifer and William R. McTigue, Jr., Handbook of Hazardous Waste Management for Small Quantity Generators, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1988. ($44.95) Aileen Schumacher, A Guide to Hazardous Materials Management: Physical Characteristics, Federal Regulations, and Response Alternatives, Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1988. ($49.95) Todd G. Schwendeman and H. Kendall Wilcox, Underground Storage Systems: Leak Detection and Monitoring, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, Inc., 1988. ($44.95) Waste: Choices for Communities, Concern, Inc. n.d. ($5.50) Roy F. Weston and University of Massachusetts Environmental Science Program, Remedial Technologies for Leaking Underground Storage Tanks, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1988. ($49.95) Incineration

Calvin R. Brunner, P.E., Handbook of Hazardous Waste Incineration, n.p.: Tab Professional and Reference Books, 1989. ($45.00)

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Harry M. Freeman, ed., Incinerating Hazardous Wastes, Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Technomic Publishing Company, 1988. ($49.00)

Information Sources The Directory of National Environmental Organizations, St. Paul, Minnesota: U.S. Environmental Directories, 1988. ($35.00) Environmental Health and Toxicology: A Bibliography of Printed Reference Sources, Center for Environmental Health and Injury Control, July 1989. (free) League of Women Voters, Hazardous Waste Goes to the Movies (catalog of audiovisual materials), 1986, #414. ($.35 non-members) Sierra Club, Federal Government Offices. ($.50 non-members) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Information Resources Management, Information Resources Directory, Fall1989. (free)

Organizing Douglas Amy, The Politics of Environmental Mediation, New York: Columbia University Press, 1987. ($30.00) Ruth Caplan and the staff of Environmental Action, Our Earth, Ourselves: The Action Oriented Guide to Help You Protect and Preserve Our Environment, New York: Bantam Books, 1990. ($10.95) Caron Chess, Winning the Right to Know: A Handbook for Taxies Activists, Washington, D.C.: National Center for Policy Alternatives, 1983. ($9.95) Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous Wastes, numerous publications. Call or write for titles and costs. Clean Water Fund of North Carolina, Environment for Cooperation: Building Community/Worker Coalitions, Asheville, North Caroline: Clean Water Fund of North Carolina, 1990. ($3.00) Gary Cohen and John O'Connor, eds., Fighting Taxies: A Manual for Protecting Your Family, Community, and Workplace, Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 1990. ($31.95 cloth, $19.95 paper) Environmental Research Foundation, numerous publications. Write or call for list. Brad Erickson, ed., Call to Action: Handbook for Ecology, Peace and Justice, San Francisco: Sierra Club, 1990. ($12.95 non-members) Adeline Gordon Levine, Love Canal: Science, Politics and People, Lexington, Massachusetts: Lexington Books, 1982. ($14.00) National Taxies Campaign, numerous publications. Write or call for list. John O'Conner, et al., The Citizens Toxic Protection Manual, Boston, Massachusetts: National Campaign Against Toxic Hazards, 1987. ($30.00)

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Jeremy Rifkin, ed. The Green Lifestyle Handbook: 1001 Ways You Can Heal the Earth, New York: Henry Holt and Company, Inc., 1990. ($10.95) Susan Sherry, High Tech and Taxies: A Guide for Local Communities, Washington, D.C.: National Center for Policy Alternatives, 1985. ($25.95) Sierra Club, Taxies Campaign Brief. ($1.00 non-members)

Pesticides See also STATUTES. R. Grover, ed., Environmental Chemistry of Herbicides, vol. I, Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press, 1988. ($135.00) League of Women Voters, America's Growing Delimma: Pesticides in Food and Water, 1989, pub #887. ($4.95 non-members) National Research Council, Alternative Agriculture, Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1989. ($24.95) Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides, several publications including periodicals. Call or write for titles and costs. Natural Resources Defense Council, several publications. Call or write for titles and costs.

Risk Assessment C. Richard Cothern, Myron A. Mehlman, and William L. Marcus, eds., Risk Assessment and Risk Management of Industrial and Environmental Chemicals, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton Scientific Publishing Co., 1988. ($65.00) Suresh H. Moolgavkar, Scientific Issues in Quantitative Cancer RiskAssessment, Boston: Birkhauser, 1990. ($42.50) Dennis J. Paustenbach, The Risk Assessment of Environmental andHuman Health Hazards: A Textbook of Case Studies, New York: Wiley, 1989. ($130.00) Curtis C. Travis, ed., Carcinogen Risk Assessment, New York: Plenum Press, 1988. ($59.00) United States Congress, Office of Technology Assessment, Identifying and Regulating Carcinogens, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1988. ($55.00)

Statutes, Regulations and Legal Issues General

Frank B. Cross, Environmentally Induced Cancer and the Law: Risks, Regulation, and Victim Compensation, New York: Quorum Books, 1989. ($45.00)

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Earon S. Davis and Valerie A. Wilk, Toxic Chemicals: The Interface Between Law and Science, 1982. (available from Ecological Illness Law Report, $9.50) Directory of State Environmental Agencies, Washington, D.C.: Environmental Law Institute, 1985. ($22.50) Environmental Law Handbook, Rockville, Maryland: Government Institutes, 1989. ($59.95) Environmental Statutes, Rockville, Maryland: Government Institutes, 1989. ($49.50 cloth, $36.50 paper) Going to Court in the Public Interest: A Guide for Community Groups, Washington, D.C.: League of Women Voters, 1983, #244. ($.85 nonmembers) Deborah Hitchcock Jessup, Guide to State Environmental Programs, Washington, D.C.: Bureau of National Affairs, 1990. ($48.00) David R. Jones and Jeffrey Tryens, Legislative Sourcebook on Taxies, Washington, D.C.: National Center for Policy Alternatives, 1986. ($14.95) Wallace E. McClain, Jr., ed., U.S. Environmental Laws, 1990 edition, Washington, D.C.: Bureau of National Affairs, 1990. ($58.00) David W. Schnare and Martin T. Katzman, eds. Chemical Contamination and Its Victims: Medical Remedies, Legal Redress, and Public Policy, New York: Quorum Books, 1989. ($45.00) Transportation ofHazardous Materials: A Management Guide for Generators and Manufacturers, Rockville, Maryland: Government Institutes, 1989. ($69.00) Jeffrey Tryens, ed., The Taxies Crisis: What the States Should Do, Washington, D.C.: National Center for Policy Alternatives, 1983. ($9.95) Sidney M. Wolf, Pollution Law Handbook, Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1988. ($55.00) Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know

Community Right-to-Know Deskbook, Washington, D.C.: Environmental Law Institute, 1988. ($75.00) George G. Lowry and Robert C. Lowry, Lowry's Handbook of Right-toKnow and Emergency Planning, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1988. ($74.95) Hazardous Waste/Toxic Substances Sue M. Briggum, et al., Hazardous Waste Regulation Handbook, New York: Executive Enterprises Publications Co., Inc. 1986. ($90.00) Mary Devine Worobec and Girard Ordway, Toxic Substances Control Guide: Federal Regulation of Chemicals in the Environment, Washington, D.C.: Bureau of National Affairs, 1989. ($37.50) Superfund Desk Book, Washington, D.C.: Environmental Law Institute, 1986. ($80.00)

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Pesticides John D. O'Conner, Jr., et al., eds., Pesticide Regulation Handbook, New York, NY: Executive Enterprises Publications Co., Inc., 1987. ($75.00) Water Edward J. Calabrese and Charles E. Gilbert, eds., Safe Drinking Water Act: Amendments, Regulations, and Standards, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1989. ($49.95) Environmental Law Institute, Clean Water Deskbook, Washington, D.C.: Environmental Law Institute, 1988. ($80.00) Russell S. Frye, et al. Clean Water Act Update, New York: Executive Enterprises Publications Co., Inc., 1987. ( $59.95) Jessica Landman, Citizen's Handbook on Water Quality Standards, New York, NY: Natural Resources Defense Council, May 1987. ($4.00) Smith and Schnacke, L.P.A. and Beveridge & Diamond, P.C., Clean Water Act Permit Guidance Manual, New York: Executive Enterprises Publications, Co., Inc. 1984. ($75.00)

Water See also STATUTES. Drinking Water: A Community Action Guide, Washington, D.C.: Concern, Inc., n.d. ($5.50) W. Wesley Eckenfelder, Jr., Industrial Water Pollution Control, 2nd edition, Hightstown, New Jersey: McGraw-Hill, 1989. ($47.00) Groundwater: A Community Action Guide, Washington, D.C.: Concern, Inc., n.d. ($5.50) Groundwater: A Citizen's Guide, Washington, D.C. League of Women Voters, 1986, #803. ($1.75 non-members) G. William Page, Planning for Groundwater Protection, Troy, Missouri: Academic Press, Inc., 1987. ($49.95) Chester D. Rail, Groundwater Contamination: Sources, Control, and Preventative Measures, Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Technomic Publishing Co., Inc., 1989. ($39.00) Safety on Tap: A Citizen's Drinking Water Guide, Washington, D.C. League of Women Voters, 1987, #840. (7.95 non-members) Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund, The Poisoned Well: New Strategies for Groundwater Protection, Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 1989. ($31.95 cloth, $19.95 paper)

Workplace Issues Division of Consumer Health Education, Department of Environmental and Community Medicine, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School,

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Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

Health and Safety in Small Industry, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1989. ($39.95) Dow Chemical Company, Industrial Hygiene: The Science and Art of Protecting Worker Health, Midland, Michigan: Dow Chemical Company, n.d. (free) Richard Kazis and Richard L. Grossman, Fear at Work: fob Black-mail, Labor and the Environment, New York: Pilgrim Press, 1982. ($10.95) The Labor Institute, OCA W-Labor Institute Hazardous Waste Workbook, New York, NY: Apex Press, 1990. ($25.50) William F. Martin, et al., Hazardous Waste Handbook for Health and Safety, Stoneham, Massachusetts: Butterworth, 1987. ($32.50) National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, quarterly announcements of publications. (free) Occupational Safety and Health Administration, A Guide to Worker Education Materials in Occupational Safety and Health volumes I & II. (free) Ronald M. Scott, Chemical Hazards in the Workplace, Chelsea, Michigan: Lewis Publishers, 1989. ($39.95) PUBLISHERS' ADDRESSES (FOR ORDERS) Academic Press 465 South Lincoln Dr. Troy, MO 63379 800-321-5068 Apex Press P.O. Box 337 Croton, NY 10520 212-953-6920 Bantam Books 414 E. Golf Road Des Plaines, IL 60016 800-223-6834 Birkhauser P.O. Box 2485 Secaucus, NJ 07094 201-348-4033 Brooks-Cole Wadsworth Customer Service Center 7625 Empire Drive Florence, KY 41042 800-354-9706

Bureau of National Affairs Distribution Center 300 Raritan Center Parkway P.O. Box 7816 Edison, NJ 08818-7816 201-225-1900 201-417-0482 (fax) Butterworth Publishers 80 Montvale Avenue Stoneham, MA 02180 800-366-2665 Center for Environmental Health and Injury Control U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Public Health Service Centers for Disease Control Information Resources Management Atlanta, GA 30333

Resource Guide Chemical Manufacturers Association Publications Fulfillment 2501 M Street NW Washington, D.C. 20037 202-887-1100

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Environmental Defense Fund 1616 P Street NW, Suite 150 Washington, D.C. 20036 202-387-3500

Citizens Fund 1300 Connecticut Avenue, NW Washington, D.C. 20036 202-857-5168

Environmental Law Institute 1616 P Street NW, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 20036 202-328-5150 202-328-5002 (fax)

Clean Water Fund of North Carolina 138 E. Chestnut Street Asheville, NC 28801 704-251-0518

Environmental Research Foundation P.O. Box 73700 Washington, D.C. 20056-3700 202-328-1119

Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous Wastes P.O. Box 6806 Falls Church, VA 22040 703-237-2249

Executive Enterprises Publications Co., Inc. 22 W. 21st Street New York, NY 10010-6904 212-645-7880

Columbia University Press 136 South Broadway Irvington-on-Hudson, NY 10533 914-591-9111

Government Institutes 966 Hungerford Drive #24 Rockville, MD 20850 301-251-9250

Concern 1794 Columbia Road NW Washington, D.C. 20009 202-328-8160

Government Printing Office Superintendent of Documents Department 36-BM Washington, D.C. 20402-9325 202-783-3238 202-275-0019 (fax)

CRC Press 2000 Corporate Blvd NW Boca Raton, FL 33431 800-272-7737 Dow Chemical USA Literature Services 2400 james Savage Road Midland, MI 48640 Ecological Illness Law Report P.O. Box 6099 Wilmette, IL 60091-6099

Greenpeace 1017 W. jackson Boulevard Chicago, IL 60607 312-666-3305 Greenwood Press 88 Post Road W., Box 5007 Westport, CT 06881 203-226-3571

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Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

Harper&Row 10 East 53rd Street New York, NY 10022 800-242-7737 800-982-4377 (Pennsylvania) Henry Holt and Company, Inc. 115 West 18th Street New York, NY 10011 800-247-3912 Hunter College School of Health Sciences 425 East 25th, Box 596 New York, NY 212-481-4355 Island Press Box 7 Covelo, CA 95428 800-828-1302 707-983-6414 (fax) League of Women Voters 1730 M Street NW Washington, D.C. 20036 202-429-1965 Lewis Publishers, Inc. 121 South Main Street P.O. Drawer 519 Chelsea, MI 48118 1-800-525-7894 Lexington Books D.C. Heath and Company 125 Spring Street Lexington, MA 02173 Little, Brown 200 West Street Waltham, MA 02154 800-343-9204 McGraw-Hill Princeton Road Hightstown, NJ 08520 800-722-4 726

C.V. Mosby Company 11830 Westline Industrial Drive St. Louis, MO 63146 National Academy Press 2101 Constitution Avenue NW Washington, D.C. 20418 800-624-6242 National Campaign Against Toxic Hazards 20 East Street, Suite 601 Boston, MA 02111 617-482-14 77 National Cancer Institute Office of Cancer Communications Building 31, Room 10A24 Bethesda, MD 20892 National Center for Environmental Health Strategies 1100 Rural Avenue Voorhees, NJ 08043 609-429-5358 National Center for Policy Alternatives 2000 Florida Avenue, NW Washington, D.C. 20009 202-387-6030 202-387-8529 (fax) National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Publications Dissemination 4676 Columbia Parkway Cincinnati, OH 45226-1998 513-533-828 7 National Technical Information Services 5285 Port Royal Road Springfield, VA 22161-0001 703-487-4650

Resource Guide National Toxics Campaign 20 East Street, Suite 601 Boston, MA 02111 617-482-1477

Oxford University Press Distribution Center 2001 Evans Road Cary, NC 27513 800-451-7556

National Wildlife Federation 1400 16th Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20036 800-432-6564

Pilgrim 36-01 43rd Avenue Long Island City, NY 11101

Natural Resources Defense Council 49 West 20th Street New York, NY 10011 212-727-2700

Plenum Press 233 Spring Street New York, NY 10013-1578 800-221-9369

Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides P.O. Box 1393 Eugene, OR 97440 503-344-5044

Quorum Books 88 Post Road West Box5007 Westport, CT 06881 203-226-3571

Occupational Safety and Health Administration Office of Publication Distribution Room S-1212 Third and Constitution Avenue NW Washington, D.C. 20210

Russell Sage Foundation Cornell University Press P.O. Box 6525 Ithaca, NY 14851 800-666-2211

OMB Watch 2001 0 Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20036 202-659-1711 Office of Technology Assessment Publications U.S. Congress Washington, D.C. 20510-8025 202-224-8996 Office of Toxic Substances TSCA Assistance Office (TS-799) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 401 M Street SW Washington, D.C. 20460 202-554-1406

Sierra Club Department SA P.O. Box 7959 San Francisco, CA 94120 415-291-1600 W.B. Saunders 6277 Sea Harbor Drive Orlando, FL 32821 800-5445-2522 Technomic Publishing Co., Inc 851 New Holland Avenue Box 3535 Lancaster, PA 17604 800-233-9936

••s

••• Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook U.S. Department of Transportation, Research and Special Programs DHM-S1 400 Seventh Street SW Washington, D.C. 20590 202-420-2301 U.S. Environmental Directories P.O. Box 65156 St. Paul, MN 55165 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Information Resources Management 401 M Street SW, PM-218B Washington, D.C. 20460 202-382-5224 U.S. Public Interest Group 215 Pennsylvania Avenue, SE Washington, D.C. 20003 Van Nostrand Reinhold 7625 Empire Drive Florence, KY 41022 606-525-6600

Vance Bibliographies P.O. Box 2158 Mansfield, OH 44905 217-762-3831 Westview Press 5500 Central Avenue Boulder, CO 80301 303-444-3541 Wiley 1 Wiley Drive Somerset, NJ 08873 201-469-4400 Work on Waste, USA 82 Judson Street Canton, NJ 13617 315-3 79-9200 Working Group on Community Right To Know do U.S. Public Interest Research Group 215 Pennsylvania Avenue Washington, D.C. 20003 202-546-9709

PERIODICALS Buzzworm: The Environmental Journal P.O. Box 6853 Syracuse, NY 13217-7930 $18.00/year, bimonthly E The Environmental Magazine Subscription Department P.O. Box 6667 Syracuse, NY 13217-7934 800-825-0061 $20.00/year, bimonthly Environmental Action 1525 New Hampshire Avenue, NW Washington, D.C. 20036 202-7 45-48 71 $20.00/year, bimonthly

Resource Guide

107

Environmental Health Monthly Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous Wastes, Inc. See organizations list below for address. $35 health professionals, $15 grassroots groups EPA Journal Editor, A-107 to subscribe: 401 M Street SW Superintendent of Documents Washington, D.C. 20460 Government Printing Office $20.00/year, bimonthly Washington, D.C., 20402 National Air Taxies Information Clearinghouse National Air Taxies Information Clearinghouse Pollutant Assessment Branch Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Research Triangle Park, N.C. 27711 919-541-5519 free, bimonthly Nutrition Action Healthletter Center for Science in the Public Interest See organizations list below for address. $19.95/year (frequent articles on pesticides and additives)

Many groups such as Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council, and Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous Wastes, to name a few, circulate a magazine or newsletter to their members. OTHER RESOURCES

Many of the books and periodicals noted above may be available at nearby libraries or through inter-library loan. The local public library, college and university libraries, and medical school libraries can be invaluable resources. Many other institutions also have libraries: Regulatory agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency (national and regional offices), hospitals, and even local law offices have collections that may be opened to you upon your request. Libraries not only have books on the shelves but also information specialists trained in research techniques. Ask for help. You will be better able to use the library's resources and so save yourself time and frustration. Regulatory agencies, schools, and other groupings of professionals such as hospitals and law offices have another resource that may be at your disposal- experts. Many activist groups can provide you with referrals to helpful experts and advice in ways to interact with professionals.

•••

Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

HOTLINE$

Acute Hazards/CEPP Hotline (EPA) Cancer Information Services (National Cancer Institute) Chemical Referral Center (Chemical Manufacturers Association) Consumer Product Safety Commission Drinking Water Hotline (EPA) Department of Transportation Hotline EPA Public Information Center Laidlaw Environmental Services (information on waste disposal) League of Conservation Voters Taxies Hotline National Animal Poison Control Center National Poison Control Center Hotline (see your phone book for your regional center) National Response Center (to report chemical spills) National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health General Information Natural Resources Defense Council Toxic Substances Information Line Occupational Safety and Health Administration Public Inquiry Pesticide Hotline (EPA funded) Superfund Hotline (EPA) SARA Hotline (for information on emergency planning and community right-toknow, EPA) Toxic Substances Control Act Tips and Complaints (EPA) Toxic Substances Control Act Hotline (EPA)

800-535-0202 800-422-623 7

Health Hotline list available from MEDIARS Management System National Library of Medicine 8600 Rockville Pike Bethesda, MD 20894

800-638-8480 (Maryland) 301-496-6293

800-262-8200 800-638-2772 800-426-4791 202-366-4488 202-475-7751 800-845-1019 800-922-5672 217-333-3611 202-625-3333

800-424-8802 800-356-4674 800-648-6732 (New York) 212-687-6862 202-523-8148 800-858-7378 800-424-9346 800-535-0202

202-382-7835 202-554-1404

Resource Guide

I 99

COMPUTER-RELA TED SERVICES Econet International e-mail and bulletin board 1200, 2400 baud (7 data bits, 1 stop bit, odd parity) No telephone charges (access through Telenet), $1S sign-up fee, $10/month for one hour of off-peak time Write for information and user id. Institute for Global Communications 3228 Sacramento Street San Francisco, CA 9411S 41S-923-0900 Environet

Large number of users e-mail and bulletin board 300, 1200, 2400 baud (8 data bits, no parity) 41S-861-6S03 (bulletin board line) Toll-free number available for grass root groups For others, long distance phone charges only user cost Sign up using bulletin board. Operated by Greenpeace Action HMIX (Hazardous Materials Information Exchange) Bulletin board 300, 1200, 2400 (8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no parity) 708-972-327S (bulletin board line) Long distance phone charges only user cost Call 800-7S2-6367 (800-367-9S92 in Illinois) for information. Sponsored by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the U.S. Department of Transportation NTIS Catalog of Data Files on Environmental Health

National Technical Information Services S28S Port Royal Road Springfield, VA 22161-0001 703-487-46SO RACHEL (Remote Access Chemical Hazards Electronic Library) 1. Abstracts from newspapers, primarily New York Times 2. New Jersey Department of Health chemical fact sheets 3. U.S. Coast Guard's Chemical Hazard Response Information Center Manual covering about lOSS chemicals 4. Information on landfills

200

Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

5. Information on incinerators 6. New technologies, recycling, pollution prevention 7. Information on particular waste-handling companies 8. Public policies, and 9. General reference information about taxies. 300, 1200, 2400, 9600 baud (7 data bits, even parity) 202-328-1065 RACHEL line Long distance phone charges only user cost Write for user id. Environmental Research Foundation P.O. Box 73700 Washington, D.C. 20056-3700 202-328-1119 TOXNET National Library of Medicine databases Of particular interest are the Hazardous Substances Databank, which has peer-reviewed health and safety information on more than 4,200 chemicals, and the Toxic Release Inventory. This database contains all the SARA Title III Community Right-to-Know reports. For the first time information on toxic releases is available: by company, by geographical area, by chemical, etc. 300, 1200, 2400 baud (even parity, 7 data bits, 1 stop bit, full duplex) no telephone charges, free user id, only costs are search fees Call or write for user id and training materials. MEDLARS Management Section National Library of Medicine 8600 Rockville Pike Bethesda, MD 20894 800-638-8480 Some Publicly Available Sources of Computerized Information on Environmental Health and Toxicology, Center for Environmental Health and Injury Control, june 1989. (free) ORGANIZATIONS Air and Waste Management Association P.O. Box 2861 Pittsburgh, PA 15230 412-232-3444

Alaska Center for the Environment 700 H Street, Suite 4 Anchorage, Alaska 99501 907-274-3621, 907-274-4145 (fax) serves Alaska

Resource Guide California Institute for Rural Studies 4570 California Avenue, #120 Bakersfield, CA 93308 805-395-1409 Center for Health Services Station 17, Vanderbilt University Nashville, TN 37332 615-322-4188 serves TN, KY, VA, WV, NC, IA, AR Center for Science in the Public Interest 1501 16th Street NW Washington, DC 20036-1499 202-332-9110 202-265-4954 (fax) Central States Education Center 809 Fifth Champaign, IL 61820 217-344-2371 serves primarily Illinois and Indiana Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous Wastes P.O. Box 6806 Falls Church, VA 22040 703-237-2249 Clean Water Action 317 Pennsylvania Ave, SE Washington, D.C. 20003 202-547-1196 Community Assistance Program in Environmental Toxicology Department of Resource Development Michigan State University East Lansing, MI 48824 517-355-3414, 517-353-8994 (fax)

101

Community Environmental Health Center Hunter College 425 E. 25th Street, Box 596 New York, NY 10010 212-481-4355, 212-481-8795 (fax) serves New York City Connecticut Fund for the Environment 152 Temple Street New Haven, CT 06510 203-865-26 77 serves Connecticut Environmental Action 1525 New Hampshire Avenue NW Washington, D.C. 20036 Environmental Defense Fund 257 Park Avenue S. New York, NY 10010 212-505-2100 Environmental Health Network P.O. Box 1628 Harvey, IA 70058 504-362-6574 Environmental Law Institute 1616 P Street, Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 20036 202-328-5150 Environmental Resource Project University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7410 919-966-3335, 919-966-7141 (fax) serves North Carolina Friends of the Earth 218 D Street SE Washington, D.C. 20003 202-544-2600

'10'1

Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

Greenpeace, U.S.A. 1436 U Street NW Washington, D.C. 202-465-1177

National Toxics Campaign 20 East Street, Suite 601 Boston, MA 02111 617-482-1477

Inform 381 Park Avenue S New York, NY 10016 212-689-4040

National Wildlife Federation 1400 16th Street NW Washington, D.C. 20036-2266 202-797-6800

Louisiana Environmental Action Network P.O. Box 66323 Baton Rouge, LA 70896-6323 504-928-1315

Natural Resources Defense Council 40 West 20th Street New York, NY 10011 212-727-2700

National Center for Policy Alternatives 2000 Florida Avenue, NW Washington, D.C. 20009 202-387-6030 202-387-8529 (fax) National Audubon Society 950 Third Avenue New York, NY 10022 212-832-3200 National Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides P.O. Box 1393 Eugene, OR 97440 503-344-5044 National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides 530 Seventh Street SE Washington, D.C. 20003 202-543-5450 National Environmental Health Association 720 S. Colorado Blvd., Suite 970 Denver, CO 80222 303-7 56-9090

Rocky Mountain Student Environmental Health Project Colorado State University Department of Environmental Health Fort Collins, CO 80523 303-491-7038, 303-491-1815 (fax) serves Rocky Mountain region Sierra Club 730 Polk Street San Francisco, CA 94109 415-776-2211 Southwest Research and Information Center P.O. Box 4524 Albuquerque, NM 87106 505-262-1862 serves southwestern U.S. Texans United 3400 Montrose, Suite 225 Houston, TX 77006 713-529-8038 Texans United 11520 North Central Expressway, Suite 133 Dallas, TX 75243 214-343-6090

Resource Guide

!IOJ

Texas Center for Policy Studies P.O. Box 2618 Austin, TX 78768 512-474-0811

U.S. Public Interest Group 215 Pennsylvania Avenue, SE Washington, D.C. 20003 202-546-9707

Toxics Assistance Program University of Texas Medical Branch 2.104 Ewing Hall, J-10 Galveston, TX 77 550 409-772-9110 serves Texas and Louisiana

Water Pollution Control Federation 601 Wythe Street Alexandria, VA 22314-1994 703-684-2400

Toxic Communications and Assistance Project Department of Natural Sciences Albany State College Albany, Georgia 31705 912-430-4811 serves Georgia, Alabama and Florida

Working Group on Community Right to Know c/o U.S. PIRG 215 Pennsylvania Avenue, SE Washington, D.C. 20003 202-546-9707

U.S. GOVERNMENT OFFICES

Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Public Health Service U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Atlanta, GA 30333 404-639-0615 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) 401 M Street, S.W. Washington, D.C. 20460 202-260-2090 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Regions

Region 1 Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont John F. Kennedy Federal Building, Room 2203 Boston, MA 02203 617-565-3 715

Region 2 New Jersey, New York, Puerto Rico, and Virgin Islands Jacob K. Javitz Federal Building 26 Federal Plaza New York, NY 10278 212-264-265 7

204

Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

Region 3 Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia 841 Chestnut Building Philadelphia, PA 19107 215-597-9800 800-438-24 74

Region 7 Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska 726 Minnesota Avenue Kansas City, KS 913-236-2800 800-223-0425 800-221-7749 (KS)

Region 4 Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee 345 Courtland Street, NE Atlanta, GA 30365 404-347-4727 800-241-1754

Region 8 Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming 999 18th Street, Suite 500 Denver, CO 80202-2405 303-293-1603 800-525-3022

Region 5 Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin 230 South Dearborn Street Chicago, Il 90904 312-353-2000 800-621-8431 800-572-2525 (IL) Region 6 Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas First Interstate Bank Tower at Fountain Place 1445 Ross Avenue, Suite 1200 Dallas, TX 75202 214-655-6444

Region 9 Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, American Samoa, Guam 215 Fremont Street, San Francisco, CA 94105 415-744-8071 Region 10 Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington 1200 Sixth Avenue Seattle, WA 98101 206-442-1200

APPEIIDIX Rates of Cancer and Birth Defects

Barbara L. Harper We have stressed throughout this manual that it is imperative to survey an unexposed or control population in exactly the same manner and with the same care as you survey your own community. As a poor second choice, we are providing some national rates or sources of such information, with all the drawbacks inherent in such figures. Most of the symptoms or conditions uncovered by a community health survey will be acute, temporary, or subclinical, meaning undetectible by standard medical tests. Generally speaking, there is almost no information on these kinds of conditions other than rough guesses published by national associations (professional or lay) for particular diseases, or by insurance companies who have to pay for much of the associated medical care, or as results of large health surveys (such as HANES- a survey of adults conducted by the Public Health Service, the Framingham heart study, and others) to which professionals or officials should have access. A few serious diseases must be reported to the Centers for Disease Control. These "notifiable" diseases include aseptic meningitis, encephalitis (primary and postinfectious), gonorrhea, hepatitis, Legionellosis, leprosy, malaria, measles, meningococcic infections, mumps, pertussis, rubella (German measles), syphillis, toxic shock syndrome, tuberculosis, tularemia, typhoid fever, typhus, rabies, and some low-frequency illnesses (plague, polio, anthrax, tetanus, etc.). Some information is available from the Public Health Service concerning health care use (how many times people see a doctor, how long they are hospitalized, what operations they have, and so on). Most of the rates calculated from these studies concern the major fatal diseases. Inquiries can be addressed to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Office of Health Research, Statistics, and Technology, or Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, National Center for Health Statistics, 3700 East West Highway, Hyattsville, Maryland 20782, tel. (301) 436-6247. Tables A.l, A.2, and A.3 are excerpted from a Public Health Service publication, Vital and Health Statistics, a serial available from libraries at many medical schools or schools of public health.

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Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

National averages of leading causes of death give some information on major health conditions, and presumably each patient has had a disease for a while before dying from it (table A.1). However, these and the following rates (tables A.2-A.6) include only patients who die, whereas community health surveys are concerned almost entirely with health before death. Note that the same source, National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), lists the total death rate for 1978 both as 883 per 100,000 (table A.4) and as 606 per 100,000 (table A.S). These same rates from NCHS (Vital and Health Statistics, 1978) are cited by other sources (American Cancer Society, for example), as different yet (table A.6). This should give you an idea of the accuracy of such rates. On the whole, published cancer rates average from 17 to 23 percent of all causes of death. Another problem in compa·ring death rates is that, for instance for cardiovascular diseases, it is not clear whether ischemic heart disease includes atherosclerosis and angina as well as heart attacks, whether cerebrovascular disease includes both cerebral hemorrhage and cerebral thrombosis, whether arteriosclerosis and hypertension are included under the umbrella of major cardiovascular disease, and so on. Cancer statistics have also been widely published. Probably the most accurate rates were determined by the National Cancer Institute as part of the SEER (Surveillance and Epidemiology End Results) reports. The most recent SEER statistics are reported in Lynn A. Gloeckler Ries, et al., eds., Cancer Statistics Review, 1973-1987, Bethesda, MD: NCI, 1990. The rates are determined using cancer registries from geographical areas covering nearly ten percent of the U.S. population. These areas were selected for their population-based cancer reporting systems and for demographic characteristics. The American Cancer Society also publishes annual cancer statistics, and these figures vary greatly from the National Cancer Institute for particular sites. One can see how the controversy arises concerning whether cancer rates are increasing or decreasing. Is two-year or fiveyear survival a "cure?" Are these rates calculated from "new cases" or from "deaths?" Does postponing death by effective treatment mean that future rates will rise? Have all cancer cases been reported and all cancer deaths accurately recorded? It should be apparent that a single national average for a particular condition or cancer site will not be very useful for purposes of a community health survey. The first point to remember is that cancer rates in general increase with age (table A.9). The second point is that some cancers incidence rates peak at different ages (leukemia peaks in childhood, then again in old age). Therefore rates for each group are needed for comparisons. Another factor that must be taken into account is the geographic dis-

Appendix: Rates of Cancer and Birth Defects

207

tributions both of some malignant and of some non-malignant conditions. The most striking example of this is ischemic heart disease (disease due to obstruction or constriction of coronary arteries), with rates taken from Mason, et al. (197Sa; cited by W. Villanueva in Discover magazine, September 1982, p. 82). The east/west variation makes it clear that a national incidence rate might not be at all comparable to the rate in your community. The best example of a population-based tumor registry is the Connecticut Tumor Registry, Connecticut State Department of Health, Hartford, Connecticut. There are many other examples of geographic differences: intestinal infectious disease is more common in the Southwest; tuberculosis is more common in Appalachia and southern Texas and among American Indians; multiple sclerosis shows a north/south gradient. These statistics, while they can be used for illustration, lack some precision because the information comes from death certificates from 1965-71, based on a 1960 census population and extrapolated to later years, and some information comes from death certificates in rural areas where there might have been no medically trained coroner or medical examiner. The third type of national rates you might need are for birth defects or congenital malformations. In general these rates are more accurate because each case must be reported when recognized, and most conditions are fairly easy for a trained pediatrician to recognize. Again, there are some geographic gradients, especially for spina bifida and hip dislocation, as reported by the Centers for Disease Control (1980) in congenital malformations surveillance reports. For comparison, rates from Bloom (1981) are given for congenital anomalies seen in over 30,000 births at the Boston Hospital for Women. Some rates show more than a two-fold difference from the Centers for Disease Control figures, for which we currently have no explanation. In addition, minor anomalies may escape notice during the first year' and thus be underreported (table A.lO). In conclusion, discrepancies in incidence and mortality rates collected by various groups and widely quoted or misquoted demonstrate the difficulty of accurately measuring background rates of major diseases or conditions. However, for rare conditions they may be the only information available, in which case we must choose what appears to be the most accurate data set to use in calculating how many cases would be expected in a smaller population. For acute or less serious conditions, there is very little reliable (quantitative) information upon which either you or state health officials can base calculations, so there is no alternative to collecting it yourself.

Table A. I. Death Rates from Specified Causes, by Race and Sex: United States, 1987 (per I00,000) Total

Cause of Death All causes Major cardiovascular diseases Hypertension Cerebrovascular diseases Arteriosclerosis Cancer Accidents Motor vehicle accidents All other accidents Influenza and pneumonia Cirrhosis of the liver Diabetes mellitus Suicide Homocide Chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases

White

--

All Other Races

Both Sexes

Male

Female

Both Sexes

Male

Female

Both Sexes

Male

Female

872.4 395.9 3.3 61.6 9.2 195.9 39.0 19.8 19.2 28.2 10.8 15.8 12.7 8.7 32.2

934.7 396.6 3.0 49.8 7.1 214.8 54.7 28.6 26.1 28.1 14.4 13.7 20.5 13.4 39.7

813.1 395.2 3.7 72.7 11.2 178.0 24.2 11.5 12.7 28.3 7.3 17.9 5.2 4.2 25.1

895.5 414.7 3.0 63.2 10.1 203.3 38.8 20.2 18.6 29.7 10.6 15.3 13.7 5.4 35.3

947.8 413.0 2.7 49.9 7.6 220.5 53.6 28.8 24.8 28.9 14.1 13.5 22.1 7.9 43.0

845.5 416.3 3.4 75.8 12.4 186.9 24.6 11.9 12.6 30.6 7.2 17.0 5.7 3.0 27.9

745.8 293.1 5.0 52.7 4.7 155.5 40.5 17.9 22.6 19.6 11.8 19.0 6.9 26.5 15.2

861.5 304.7 4.7 49.2 4.1 183.3 60.6 27.7 33.4 23.8 16.0 15.0 11.6 43.9 20.9

640.0 282.4 5.4 55.8 5.1 130.1 22.0 9.3 12.8 15.9 7.9 22.7 2.5 10.7 10.0

Source: Adapted from National Center for Health Statistics, Vital Statistics of the United States 1987, Vol. II Mortality Part A, Washington, DC: Public Health Service, 1990.

Table A.l. Death Rates for Various Age Groups, by Race and Sex: United States, 1987 (per I00,000) Total

Age Group All ages• Under 1 year 1-4 5-14 15-24 25-34 35-44 45-55 55-64 65-74 75-84 85 and older

White

All Other Races

Both Sexes

Male

Female

Both Sexes

Male

Female

Both Sexes

Male

Female

872.4 1018.5 51.6 25.6 99.4 133.2 214.1 498.0 1241.3 2751.3 6282.5 15320.8

934.7 1128.8 57.5 31.9 146.1 192.6 291.8 644.2 1624.6 3617.8 8224.4 18031.1

813.1 902.2 45.4 19.0 51.7 73.8 138.6 359.8 900.3 2062.6 5117.6 14260.9

895.5 845.1 46.4 24.1 93.8 115.7 184.2 451.9 1182.1 2688.9 6247.8 15580.5

947.8 942.1 52.0 30.0 137.3 167.8 249.6 582.8 1552.8 3548.4 8212.2 18434.9

845.5 742.9 40.5 17.9 49.1 62.6 119.3 325.7 848.5 2001.8 5075.2 14486.9

745.8 1757.0 73.6 31.8 124.9 225.7 396.7 786.7 1677.2 3286.6 6629.7 12683.3

861.5 1938.0 81.1 39.9 186.6 331.6 570.9 1057.9 2181.8 4230.8 8340.0 14514.5

640.0 1571.5 65.8 23.5 63.5 129.5 248.4 559.4 1265.1 2571.2 5542.5 11809.8

•Figures for age not stated are included in "all ages" but not distributed among age groups. Source: Adapted from National Center for Health Statistics (1990).

Table A.J. Leading Causes of Death in the United States, 1987 (Rates per 100,000 population)

1 2 3 4

5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

All causes Diseases of heart Malignant neoplasms Cerebrovascular diseases Accidents and adverse effects Motor vehicle accidents All other Chronic obstructive pulmonary conditions Pneumonia and influenza Diabetes mellitus Suicide Chronic liver disease and cirrhosis Atherosclerosis Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis Homicide and legal intervention Septicemia Certain conditions originating in perinatal period Human immunodeficiency virus infection All other causes

Source:

Rate

Percent of total deaths

872.4 312.4 195.9 61.6 39.0 19.8 19.2 32.2 28.4 15.8 12.7 10.8 9.2 9.1 8.7 8.2 7.5 5.5 115.4

100.0 35.8 22.5 7.1 4.5 2.3 2.2 3.7 3.3 1.8 1.5 1.2 1.1 1.0 1.0 .9 .9 .6 13.2

National Center for Health Statistics (1990).

Table A.4. Leading Causes of Death in the United States, 1978

1 2 3 4

5 6 7 8 9 10

All causes Heart diseases Cancer Cerebrovascular diseases Accidents Motor vehicle accidents All other Influenza and pneumonia Diabetes mellitus Cirrhosis of the liver Arteriosclerosis Suicide Diseases of early infancy All other causes

Source:

(1983).

Number of Deaths

Death Rate per 100,000

1,927,788 729,510 396,992 175,629 105,561 52,411 53,150 58,319 33,841 30,066 28,940 27,294 22,033 319,603

883.4 334.3 181.9 80.5 48.4 24.0 24.4 26.7 15.5 13.8 13.3 12.5 10.1 146.5

National Center for Health Statistics. Cited in Hammond Almanac

Appendix: Rates of Cancer and Birth Defects

2II

Table A.S. Leading Causes of Death in the United States, 1978

Cause of Death

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

All causes Heart disease Cancer Stroke Accidents Influenza and penumonia Suicide Diabetes mellitus

Percentage of Total Deaths

Death Rate per 100,000

100.0 34.3 22.1 7.5 7.3 2.5 2.0 1.7

606 208 134 45 44 15 12 10

Source: National Center for Health Statistics, "Final Mortality Statistics, 1978," Monthly Vital Statistics Report, vol. 29, no. 6, suppl. 2, 17 September 1980.

TableA.6. Leading Causes of Death in the United States, 1978

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

12 13 14 15

Cause of Death

Percentage of Total Deaths

Death Rate per 100,000

All causes Heart disease Cancer Cerebrovascular diseases Accidents Pneumonia and influenza Chronic obstructive lung diseases Diabetes mellitus Cirrhosis of the liver Arteriosclerosis Suicide Diseases of infancy Homicide Aortic aneurysm Congenital anomalies Pulmonary Infarction

100.0 37.8 20.6 9.1 5.5 3.0 2.6 1.8 1.6 1.5 1.4 1.1 1.1 0.8 0.7 0.6

810.0 300.4 169.9 70.8 45.8 23.6 21.2 14.2 13.4 11.1 11.6 12.1 8.7 5.8 6.8 4.6

Source: National Center for Health Statistics, Vital Statistics of the United States, 1978, as cited by the American Cancer Society, Cancer Statistics, vol. 33, no. 1, 1983.

Table A.7. Cancer Incidence as Percent of Total, 1983-1987, by Site, Sex, and Race-SEER Program All Races

Site All Sites Oral & Pharynx Esophagus Stomach Colon/Rectum Liver & Intrahep Pancreas Larynx Lung & Bronchus Melanoma of Skin Breast Cervix Uteri Corp & Uter, NOS Ovary Prostate Gland Testis Urinary Bladder Kidney & Ren Pelv Brain & Nerv Sys Thyroid Gland Hodgkin's Disease Non-Hodgkin's Lym Multiple Myeloma Leukemia

Both Sexes 436,520 100.0% 3.0 1.0 2.3 14.1 .7 2.6 1.2 15.0 2.8 15.0 1.3 3.2 2.0 10.2 .6 4.6 2.1 1.6 1.2 .8 3.4 1.1 2.7

Males 219,469 100.0% 4.1 1.4 2.8 14.0 1.0 2.6 1.9 19.5 2.9 .2

20.4 1.3 6.8 2.6 1.7 .6 .9 3.6 1.2 3.0

Whites Females 217,051 100.0% 1.9 .6 1.8 14.0 .5 2.7 .4 10.4 2.6 29.6 2.6 6.4 3.9

2.4 1.6 1.4 1.8 .7 3.2 1.0 2.4

Both Sexes 377,271 100.0% 2.9 .9 2.0 14.3 .6 2.6 1.2 14.9 2.9 15.2 1.1 3.3 2.1 10.1 .7 4.9 2.1 1.6 1.2 .8 3.5 1.1 2.7

Males 188,022 100.0% 3.9 1.2 2.5 14.3 .7 2.5 2.0 19.1 3.0 .2 -

20.3 1.4 7.3 2.7 1.8 .6 .9 3.8 1.1 3.1

Blacks Females 189,249 100.0% 1.9 .5 1.6 14.3 .4 2.6 .4 10.5 2.7 30.2 2.3 6.7 4.1 -

2.5 1.6 1.5 1.7 .7 3.3 1 2.4

Both Sexes 35,978 100.0% 3.7 2.7 3.1 12.4 .9 3.5 1.7 18.9 .2 13.0 2.4 2.0 1.4 12.8 .1 2.4 2.0 1.0 .7 .6 2.2 2.1 2.3

Source: Adapted from Lynn A. Gloeckler Ries, eta!., eds. Cancer Statistics Review, 1973-1987, Bethesda, MD: NCI, 1990.

Males 19,491 100.0% 5.0 3.8 3.5 10.8 1.2 3.1 2.5 25.0 .1 .2

Females

-

16,487 100.0% 2.0 1.5 2.7 14.4 .6 3.9 .8 11.7 .3 28.2 5.2 4.4 3.1

23.5 .3 3.0 2.3 1.2 .3 .7 2.2 2.0 2.3

1.7 1.7 1.0 1.2 .5 2.2 2.2 2.3

-

Table A.a. Cancer Mortality as Percent of Total, 1983-1987, by Site, Sex, and Race-SEER Program All Races

Site All Sites Oral & Pharynx Esophagus Stomach Colon/Rectum Liver & Intrahep Pancreas Larynx Lung & Bronchus Melanoma of Skin Breast Cervix Uteri Corp & Uter, NOS Ovary Prostate Gland Testis Urinary Bladder Kidney & Ren Pelv Brain & Nerv Sys Thyroid Gland Hodgkin's Disease Non-Hodgkin's Lym Multiple Myeloma Leukemia

Both Sexes 2,118,533 100.0% 2.0 1.9 3.4 12.9 1.4 5.1 .8 25.2 1.2 8.6 1.1 1.4 2.6 5.5 .1 2.3 1.8 2.2 .2 .5 3.0 1.6 3.9

Males 1,145,954 100.0% 2.6 2.6 3.7 11.7 1.5 4.9 1.3 33.5 1.3 .1 -

10.3 .2 2.9 2.1 2.3 .2 .5 2.9 1.5 4.0

Source: Adapted from Gloeckler Reis, et al. (1990).

Whites Females 972,579 100.0% 1.4 1.1 3.0 14.5 1.2 5.5 .3 15.5 1.1 18.7 2.5 3 5.6

1.6 1.5 2.2 .3 .4 3.2 1.7 3.8

Both Sexes 1,970,686 100.0% 1.9 1.6 3.2 13.3 1.3 5.1 .8 25.3 1.3 8.8 1.0 1.4 2.8 5.2 .1 2.4 1.9 2.3 .2 .3 3.2 1.5 4.0

Males 1,003,460 100.0% 2.5 2.2 3.5 12.1 1.4 4.9 1.2 33.7 1.4 .1

9.8 .2 3.1 2.2 2.4 .2 .5 3.1 1.4 4.2

Blacks Females 867,226 100.0% 1.4 1.0 2.8 14.6 1.2 5.4 .3 15.7 1.2 18.9 2.1 2.9 5.8 -

1.6 1.6 2.3 .3 .5 3.4 1.6 3.9

Both Sexes 229,835 100.0% 2.7 4.3 4.6 10.6 1.8 5.3 1.2 24.6 .2 7.4 2.3 1.7 1.7 8.1 .1 1.7 1.3 1.2 .2 .3 1.6 2.4 2.9

Males 132,286 100.0% 3.6 5.6 5.0 8.6 2.0 4.7 1.6 32.6 .2 .1

Females

-

97,549 100.0% 1.5 2.5 4.1 13.3 1.5 6.1 .5 13.8 .3 17.2 5.4 4.1 4.1

14.2 .1 1.7 1.4 1.1 .1 .3 1.6 2.2 2.7

1.7 1.2 1.3 .3 .3 1.7 2.8 3.2

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2 14

Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

Table A.9. Age-specific Rates of Cancer, 1987 Age Group All Ages 0-4 5-14 15-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65-74 75-84 85+

Rates per 100,000 171.5 3.5 3.4 5.0 12.0 46.1 170.7 427.0 860.1 1316.4 1627.2

Source: Adapted from Gloeckler Reis, et al. (1990).

Table A. I 0. Incidence of Selected Congential Malformations per I 0,000 Births

Malformation

Central nervous system Anencephaly 1970-73 1979 1980 Spina bifida without anencephaly 1970-73 1979 1980 Hydrocephalus without spina bifida 1970-73 1979 1980 Cardiovascular Transportation of great vessels 1970-73 1979 1980

North- North east Central

South

West

Total

u.s.

5.1 3.3 3.7

4.9 3.9 3.1

5.8 3.5 3.8

5.1 3.3 2.5

5.2 3.6 3.3

6.9 5.1 3.8

7.1 5.1 5.1

8.7 5.1 6.9

5.6 4.4 4.0

7.2 5.0 5.2

4.7 4.8 3.9

4.8 4.6 3.9

5.0 4.7 4.6

4.2 4.0 3.4

4.7 4.6 4.0

0.9 1.1 0.9

0.8 1.1 0.7

0.7 0.8 0.8

0.9 1.2 0.5

0.8 1.0 0.7

Table A. I 0. (continued)

Malformation Ventricular septal defect 1970-73 1979 1980 Patent ductus arteriosus 1970-73 1979 1980 Craniofacial Cleft palate without cleft lip 1970-83 1979 1980 Cleft lip with or without cleft palate 1970-73 1979 1980 Musculoskeletal Clubfoot without CNS anomalies 1970-73 1979 1980 Reduction deformity 1970-73 1979 1980 Hip dislocation without CNS anomalies 1970-73 1979 1980 Gastrointestinal Tracheoesophageal fistula 1970-73 1979 1980 Rectal atresia stenosis 1970-73 1979 1980 Genitourinary Renal agenesis 1970-73 1979 1980

North- North Central east

South

West

Total U.S.

5.8 12.2 14.5

4.6 10.7 11.3

4.5 8.6 10.3

7.1 12.5 12.4

5.2 10.7 11.7

4.6 16.8 17.1

4.6 17.9 15.8

4.3 13.7 16.1

8.5 19.7 19.2

5.1 16.8 16.7

5.7 4.3 3.9

5.4 5.7 5.2

4.7 5.2 4.6

5.6 4.9 5.4

5.3 5.2 4.9

9.2 5.7 6.6

10.6 8.6 8.4

9.2 7.7 7.7

11.2 7.8 8.9

10.0 7.7 8.0

33.6 30.8 30.2

33.5 28.7 29.8

21.5 20.1 21.5

23.1 20.9 18.7

29.4 25.3 25.7

2.9 3.6 4.4

3.0 3.7 3.9

3.1 3.1 3.4

4.0 4.0 3.8

3.1 3.6 3.8

12.2 27.4 30.7

8.4 21.2 20.7

6.5 18.7 18.5

13.9 32.6 29.1

9.6 23.6 23.1

1.7 1.8 1.9

1.4 1.8 2.2

1.8 1.5 1.7

1.7 2.1 1.9

1.6 1.7 2.0

4.2 3.8 4.1

3.5 2.9 3.6

3.1 2.9 3.2

3.6 2.9 2.6

3.6 3.1 3.4

0.9 1.0 0.9

0.8 1.3 1.5

0.8 1.0 1.2

0.8 1.5 1.0

0.8 1.2 1.2

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Chemical Alert! A Community Action Handbook

Table A. I 0. (continued)

Malformation Hypospadias (per 10,000 male births) 1970-73 1979 1980 Chromosomal Down's syndrome 1970-73 1979 1980

North- North Central east

South

West

Total

u.s.

45.5 53.0 58.7

42.7 48.9 53.8

38.4 45.8 45.8

41.3 48.8 44.8

42.2 48.7 50.8

9.7 8.0 8.7

8.3 7.9 7.4

6.6 7.2 5.7

8.9 6.9 8.6

8.3 7.6 7.3

Source: Centers for Disease Control, Congenital Malformations Surveillance, JanuaryDecember 1979, issued December 1980; January-December 1980, issued February 1982.

Table A. I 1. Frequency of Selected Reproductive Outcomes

Outcome Azoospermia Birth weight